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THEMSTRYOTJ 



AnDSUSAQf?AASFORDBY 

WITH SOWE 0^ THEIR DESCEf?0AI7rS 

BY/^S-SAWIIfLRIiOOlPHTIiRK 

FRAnKAllABEn CEDEftLOGICAL COt72PAJ2Y 



> ] 

> > » 






Copyright, 1909, 



BY 



Frank Allaben Genealogical Company 






C. 4 24f;411 
SEP 9 7909 



:::i 



PREFACE 

This little book has been compiled for the purpose of 
rescuing from unmerited oblivion and preserving in 
a permanent form a record of the descendants of John 
Beatty and Susanna Asfordby, as well as with the aim 
to kindle and keep alive, in those of their line now liv- 
ing, a love and veneration for their memories. For a 
more detailed account of their antecedents — with proof 
of such pedigrees as are therein given — the reader is 
referred to "The Ancestry of Leander Howard Crall." 
My brief sketch contains no statement which can not be 
verified by history, well authenticated records, and the 
highest genealogical authorities. 

An ardent desire to preserve family data worthy of 
being transmitted to posterity has been the main in- 
centive of this work; and, if my kindred shall speak 
kindly of my humble effort, studying it with a desire to 
find from whom they are sprung, and to be exalted 
thereby in their lives, I shall be more than repaid for 
the labor and pains expended herein. 

Mrs. Rudolph Samuel Turk. 
Staunton, Virginia, January 4, 1909. 



CONTENTS 



John Beatty 
Susanna Asfordby 



Preface 

Ancestry of 

Beatty 

Ancestry of 

Asfordby 

Billesby 

Heneage 

Langton 

Sandon 

TsTewcomen 

Wolley 

Quadring 

Fulnetby 

Cracroft 

Gascoigne 

Beckwith 

Vavasour 

Skipwith 

Plantagenet 

Descendants of John 

fordby 
First Generation . 
Second Generation 
Third Generation 
Fourth Generation 
Fifth Generation 
Sixth Generation 
Seventh Generation 
Appendix 

Will of John Beatty 
Will of Susanna Asfordby 
Baptismal Eecords 



Beatty and Susanna As 



PAGS 

7 
13 
15 
19 
21 
26 
30 
34 
38 
42 
47 
51 
55 
59 
63 
68 
79 
85 
91 

99 
101 
107 
109 
113 
119 
125 
134 
139 
141 
143 
146 



CONTENTS 



Will of William Beatty 

Will of Cornelius Cormack 

Extracts of Land Patents 

Will of John Carv 

Eevolutionary Records of P. R. F. Lee 

Record of the Ritchie Family 

Ritchie Letters .... 

Two Ritchie Documents 

Ritchie Bible Records . 

Obituary Notice of Martin Knupp 

Marriage License of William Cary 

Will of W^illiam Cary . 

Index ...... 



PAGE 

147 
149 
151 
152 
154 
155 
156 
159 
161 
164 
167 
167 
173 



ILLUSTRATIONS 



PAGE 



Beatty Arms, Quartering Asfordby . Frontispiece 
Title-Page, Designed by Georgia Cooper Wash- 
burn ..--.... 5 



Beatty Arms 
Asfordl)y Arms 
Billesby Arms 
Heneage Arms 
Langton Arms 
Sandon Arms 
iSTewcomen Arms 
Wolley Arms 
Quadring Arms 
Fulnetby Arms 
Cracroft Arms 
Gascoigne Arms 
Beckwith Arms 
Vavasour Arms 
Skipwith Arms 



17 
23 
27 
31 
35 
39 
43 
49 
53 
57 
61 
65 
69 
81 
87 



ANCESTRY OF JOHN BEATTY 



BEATTY 

Arms: Sable, a chevron between three goats passant 
argent, attired or, each charged with two pellets gules; 
on a chief of the third, a demi-woodman holding in his 
right hand a club, between two cinquefoils, all of the 
fourth. 

Crest: A stork with a fish in his beah, all proper. 

The following is the descent of John Beatty, the first 
of his line in America, from Prince Goffrey, or Jeffrey, 
of Scotland, who, according to tradition, was descended 
from Heremon, the first king of Ireland. 

1. Goffrey, or Jeffrey, fought with Brian Boru at 
the Battle of Clontarf, A.D. 1014. He had a son: 

2. Conchgall, whose son was: 

3. Maoulculum (Malcolm), who had a son: 

4. Alpin, who had a son : 

5. Scalbhaidh, who had a son: 

6. Amhailgadh, whose son was: 

7. Scanlan. whose son was: 

8. Dolbh, of the Orkney Isles. He had issue : 

9. Dolbh, of Loch Broin. He had a son: 

10. Loam, whose son was : 

11. Constantine, who had issue: 

12. John Mor. His son was : 

13. William, who had issue : 

14. Richard, whose son was: 

15. Garrett. He returned to Ireland, the ancient 
home of the family. His son was : 

16. John Betagh, the first to assume this surname. 
He had issue: 

17. Henry, who had a son: 

15 



16 BEATTY-ASFORDBY 

18. William au Thiona, or William of the Wine. He 
had issue: 

19. Edward, whose son was : 

20. John, whose son was : 

21. Garrett, who had issue: 

22. William Beattie, who had a son : 

23. Eobcrt Beattie, whose son was: 

24. James Beattie, who had issue : 

25. Edward Beattie. He had issue: 

26. John Beatty, who emigrated to America, set- 
tling in Ulster County, Kew York, where he married 
Susanna Asfordby. 



ANCESTRY OF SUSANNA ASFORDBY 



ASFORDBY 

Arms : Quarterly 1 and 4, or, a saltire engrailed 
sable (Asfordby) ; 2, argent, a chevron between three 
bill's heads sable (Billesby) ; 4, argent, a chevron sable 
between three trefoils azure, a crescent for difference 
(Coventreye). 

Crest: A horse's head erased at the neck sable, 
bridled or. 

1. Jordan de Asfordby "held ye 4th part of a fee in 
Asfordby of Geoffry de Beningworth of ye Honor of 
the Countess of Bolingbroke." The name of his wife 
is not known. He had a son: 

2. Sir WilHam de Asfordby, Knight, Lord of As- 
fordby, County Lincoln, England, who married Muriel, 
daughter and heiress of John Billesby, second son of 
Robert Billesby. She held a "manor in Asfordby and 
Billesby of ye Honor of Lancaster" in the twenty-fifth 
year of Edward I. (1296-7), and was then called Muriel 
de Asfordby. Their son: 

3. Sir Jordan de Asfordby, Knight, held lands in 
Asfordby of the heir of Gerard de Chauncey, which 
were taken "into ye King^s hands 1327," the first year 
of Edward III. His wife was Petronella, daughter and 
heiress of John Coventry. They had issue : 

4. William de Asfordby, oldest son and heir, who 
did homage for his lands the second year of Edward 
III. (1328). He married Muriel, and had issue: 

5. John de Asfordby, son and heir, who married 
Margaret, and had issue : 

6. William Asfordby of Asfordby, son and heir. 
The name of his wife is not known. He had issue : 

21 



22 BEATTY-ASFORDBY 

7. John Asfordby of Asfordby, son and heir. The 
name of his wife is not known. He had issue : 

8. William Asfordby of Asfordby, son and heir, 
who married Johana, daughter and heiress of Lincoln. 
They had issue : 

9. William Asfordby of Asfordby, son and heir. He 
married the daughter and heiress of Kyme of Langton. 
They had issue : 

10. John Asfordby of Asfordby, oldest son and heir, 
who married, first, Elizabeth, daughter of John Hen- 
eage of Hainton, second. Cicely, daughter of John 
Billesby of Billesby and widow of Alexander Langton 
of Langton. She survived her husband and was execu- 
trix of his will in 1527. John Asfordby died 15 No- 
vember, 1527. His will, made the day previous, was 
proved 21 December, 1527, the nineteenth year of 
Henry VIII. By his first wife, Elizabeth, he had 
issue : 

11. Andrew Asfordby of Billesby, oldest son and 
heir, aged thirteen in 1527, who died before 15 Decem- 
ber, 1558. His will, made 30 May, 1556, was proved 
26 January, 1561. He married Jane, the daughter of 
his stepmother, Cicely, by her first husband, Alexander 
Langton. Her will, dated 15 December, 1558, was 
proved 6 April, 1559. 

12. Edward Asfordby of Billesby, oldest son and 
heir of the preceding, held divers lands in Billesby and 
Asfordby of the Duchy of Lancaster, 1576-79. His 
will, made 2 June, 1590, was proved 23 December, 
1591. He married Katherine, daughter of William 
Sandon of Ashby-by-Partney, who was living, unmar- 
ried, 9 October, 1558. She was executrix of her hus- 
band in 1591. They had issue: 

13. William Asfordby of Billesby and Asfordby, 
oldest son and heir. He was of Newark-on-Trent, 
Nottinghamshire, 29 January, 1617, and was buried at 
Saltfieetby All Saints in May, 1623. His wife was 
Eleanor, daughter of John Newcomen of Saltfieetby 
All Saints. She was baptized 10 November, 1576, mar- 




j|^f$rfel|. 



BEATTY-ASFORDBY 25 

ried 20 April, 1597, and buried at Saltfleetby 9 June, 
1634. They had issue : 

14. John Asfordby of Saltfleetby, only son and heir, 
who signed the Asfordby pedigree in 1634, and was liv- 
ing 11 November, 1657. He married Alice, daughter 
of William Wolley of Cumberworth, where she was mar- 
ried 14 October, 1634. She was buried at Saltfleetby 
All Saints 16 June, 1658. They had issue: 

15. William Asfordby of Stayne-in-the-Marsh, 
County Lincoln, England, and Kingston and Marble- 
town, 'Ulster County, New York, oldest son and heir, 
baptized at Saltfleetby 29 March, 1638. He was a 
magistrate of Ulster County, New York, a member of 
the first New York Assembly, and Sheriff of Ulster 
County. His will, made 6 November, 1697, was proved 
24 February, 1698. He married Martha, daughter of 
William Burton of Burgh-in-the-Marsh, County Lin- 
coln, England. She was living in England, 18 March, 
1668, and was the sole heir and executrix of her hus- 
band, in Ulster County, New York, in 1698. She died 
before 20 April, 1711. 

16. Susanna Asfordby, first surviving daughter of 
the preceding, was co-heiress of her father and mother. 
Her marriage license was issued 7 November, 1691. 
She was joint heir of her husband. She died in Fred- 
erick County, Maryland, where her will, made 20 June, 
1742, was proved 30 October, 1745. She married John 
Beatty of Kingston and Marbletown, Ulster County, 
New York, who was returned for Sheriff of Ulster 
County, was Trustee of Marbletown, and Deputy Sur- 
veyor of the Province of New York. His will, made 
26 April, 1720, was proved 9 March, 1721. 



BTLLESBY 

Arms: Argent, a chevron between three bill's heads 
sable. 

Crest: A panthers head erased affrontee ermine. 

1. John de Billesby is the first on the Billesby pedi- 
gree. He had issue : 

2. Robert de Billesby of Billesby, son and heir. The 
name of his wife is not known. He had issue : 

3. John de Billesby, second son, the name of whose 
wife is not known. He had a daughter and heiress, 
Muriel, who married Sir William de Asfordby. For 
the continuation of this line see Asfordby. 

3. Eudo de Billesby, brother of the preceding, John 
de Billesby, was the eldest son and heir of their father, 
Robert de Billesby of Billesby. The name of his wife 
is not known. He had issue : 

4. Richard Billesby of Billesby, son and heir. The 
name of his wife is not kncw^n. He had issue : 

5. John Billesby of Billesby, who died in the sev- 
enteenth year of Richard II. (1393). He married 
Joan, daughter and heiress of Thomas Malherbe. They 
had issue : 

6. Thomas Billesby of Billesby, son and heir, aged 
seventeen in 1393. He succeeded as his father's heir in 
the eighth year of Henry VI. (1429-30). He married 
Agnes, daughter and heiress of John Kenermond, or 
Kirmond. They had issue : 

7. Richard Billesby of Billesby, son and heir, who 
was of age in the nineteenth year of Henry VI. and 
succeeded as heir of his father in the thirty-eighth year 
of Henry VI. (1459). His wife was Elizabeth, daugh- 
ter of John Sheffield of Butterick. They had issue: 

26 





a 




BEATTY-ASFORDBY 29 

8. John Billesby of Billesby, son and heir, aged 
nineteen in the thirty-eighth year of Henry VI. (1459). 
His wife was Elizabeth, daughter of John Eland. They 
had issue : 

9. Cecily, a daughter, who married, first, Alexander 
Langton of Langton, and, second, John Asfordby of 
Asfordby. By her first husband, Alexander Langton, 
she had issue: 

10. Jane Langton, a daughter, whose will, dated 15 
December, 1558, was proved 6 April, 1559. She mar- 
ried Andrew Asfordby of Billesby, the son of her step- 
father, John Asfordby, by the latter's first wife, Eliza- 
beth Heneage. They had issue : 

11. Edward Asfordby of Billesby, son and heir, who 
married Katharine, daughter of William Sandon of 
Ashby-by-Partney, and had issue: 

12. William Asfordby of Billesby and Asfordby, son 
and heir, who married Eleanor, daughter of John New- 
comen of Saltfleetby All Saints, and had issue: 

13. John Asfordby of Saltfleetby, son and heir, who 
married Alice, daughter of William WoUey of Cum- 
berworth, and had issue : 

14. William Asfordby of Stayne-in-the-Marsh, 
County Lincoln, England, and Kingston and Marble- 
town, Ulster County, New York, son and heir, who 
married Martha, daughter of William Burton of 
Burgh-in-the-Marsh, and had issue : 

15. Susanna Asfordby, eldest surviving daughter 
and co-heiress, who married John Beatty of Kingston 
and Marbletown, Ulster County, New York. 



HENEAGE 

Arms: Quarterly; 1 and 4, or, a greyhound courani 
sable, between three leopard's faces azure, a b ordure 
engrailed gules (Heneage) ; 2 and 3, gules, three 
garbs or (Preston). 

Crest: A greyhound courani sable. 

Motto : Toujours ferine. 

1. John Heneage of Hainton, legatee to John, Lord 
La Warr, in 1398, died 22 September, 1439. His first 
wife was Alice, daughter of Walter Goddard of Snet- 
tisham, County Norfolk. His second wife was Joan, 
daughter of Sir Anthony Browne, Knight. By his first 
wife he had issue : 

2. John Heneage of Hainton, son and heir, who 
died in 1473. His will was dated 4 December, 1469. 
He married Eleanor, daughter and heiress of John 
Preston of South Reston, County Lincoln, their mar- 
riage settlement being made in 1451. They had issue: 

3. John Heneage of Hainton, son and heir, who 
married Katherine, daughter of Thomas Wymbish of 
Nocton, and died 31 May, 1530, aged seventy-eight. 
They had issue: 

4. p]lizabetli Heneage, a daughter, who married 
John Asfordby of Asfordby, and by hirn liad issue : 

5. Andrew Asfordby of Billesby, who married Jane, 
the daughter of his step-mother, Cicely Billesby, by her 
first husband, Alexander Langton. They had issue: 

6. Edward Asford})y of Billesby, son and heir, who 
married Katherine, daughter of William Sandon of 
Ashby-by-Partney, and had issue : 

7. William Asfordby of Billesby and Asfordby, son 

30 




JleiBeDi^e 



BEATTY-ASFOEDBY 33 

and heir, who by his wife, Eleanor, daughter of John 
Newcomen of Saltfleetby All Saints, had issue: 

8. John Asfordby of Saltfleetby, son and heir, who 
married Alice, daughter of William Wolley of Cumber- 
worth, and by her had issue : 

9. William Asfordby of Stayne-in-the-Marsh, Coun- 
ty Lincoln, England, and Kingston and Marbletown, 
IJlster County, New York, son and heir, who married 
Martha, daughter of William Burton of Burgh-in-the- 
Marsh, and had issue: 

10. Susanna Asfordby, eldest surviving daughter 
and co-heiress, who married John Beatty of Kingston 
and Marbletown, Ulster County, New York. 



LANGTON 

Arms : Quarterly; 1 and 4, quarterly, sable and or, 
a bend argent (Langton) ; 2 and 3, or, fretty azure, 
on a canton gules, a cross pattee argent (Mumby). 

Crest : An eagle or, and wivern vert, their necks en- 
twined reguardant. 

1. John Langton, of Langton-by-Spilsby, married a 
daughter of Sir John Greene, and had issue: 

2. William Langton of Langton, son and heir, who 
married a daughter of Robert de Tatershall, and had 
issue : 

3. William Langton of Langton, son and heir, the 
name of whose wife is not known. He had issue : 

4. John Langton of Langton, son and heir, who 
married a daughter of Sir Robert Aske, Knight, and 
had issue: 

5. John Langton of Langton, son and heir, who 
married a daughter of Hardinshed, and had issue: 

6. William Langton of Langton, son and heir, the 
name of whose wife is unknown. He had issue : 

7. John Langton of Langton, son and heir, who 
married a daughter of William Bratoft, and had issue: 

8. John Langton of Langton, son and heir, who 
married a daughter of Sir John Fitzsimons, and had 
issue : 

9. John Langton of Langton, son and heir, who 
married the daughter and co-heiress of Mumby, and 
had issue: 

10. John Langton of Langton, son and heir, whose 
wife was Joan, daughter of Sir Nicholas Tamworth of 
Leake, Knight, by whom he had issue : 

11. Sir Thomas Langton, Knight, son and heir, 
who married Anne, daughter of Sir Thomas Rochford, 
Knight, and had issue : 

34 




fl!®iil$® 



BEATTY-ASFORDBY 37 

12. John Langton of Langton, son and heir, who 
married Elizabeth, daughter of Portington, and had 
issue : 

13. Thomas Langton of Langton, son and heir, who 
married Margaret, daughter of Harrington, and had 
issue : 

14. John Langton of Langton, son and heir, whose 
wife was Ivatherine, daughter and co-heiress of John 
Mewer of Saltflethaven, by whom he had issue : 

15. John Langton of Langton, son and heir. His 
will, dated 23 May, 1533, was proved at Lincoln, 5 
February, 1533-34. He married Elizabeth, daughter of 
William Quadring of Irby. She died before 23 May, 
1533. They had issue : 

16. Alexander Langton, second son, and heir of his 
older brother, John. Alexander Langton married 
Cicely, daughter of John Billesby of Billesby, by whom 
he had issue : 

17. Jane Langton, a daughter, who married An- 
drew Asfordby of Billesby, by whom she had issue: 

18. Edward Asfordby of Billesby, son and heir, who 
married Katherine, daughter of William Sandon of 
Ashby-by-Partney, and had issue : 

19. William Asfordby of Billesby and Asfordby, 
son and heir, whose wife was Eleanor, daughter of John 
Newcomen of Saltfleetby All Saints, by whom he had 
issue : 

20. John Asfordby of Saltfleetby, son and heir, who 
married Alice, daughter of William Wolley of Cum- 
berworth, and by her had issue : 

21. William Asfordby of Stayne-in-the-Marsh, 
County Lincoln, England, and Kingston and Marble- 
town, Ulster County, New York, son and heir, whose 
wife was Martha, daughter of William Burton of 
Burgh-in-the-Marsh, by whom he had issue : 

22. Susanna Asfordby, eldest surviving daughter 
and co-heiress, who married John Beatty of Kingston 
and Marbletown, Ulster County, New York. 



SANDON 

Arms : Gules, a chevron wavy between three hull's 
heads argent. 

1. William Sandon, married Margaret, daughter of 
Rigmaden, and had issue: 

2. Ivo Sandon of Ashb^^-by-Partney, "patron of ye 
Church 1468." He married Margaret, daughter of 
John Shipwith of Louth. She was living in 1468. At 
her death he married Joan, who was living in 1545. 
By his first wife he had issue : 

3. Sir William Sandon, Knight, who was con- 
cerned in the Lincolnshire Rebellion of 1536, and died 
12 May, 1545. His wife was Elizabeth, daughter of 
John Fulnetby of Fulnetby, co-heiress of her mother, 
Elizabeth, who was daughter and heiress of John Eland. 
They had issue: 

4. Arthur Sandon, who died 8 September, in the 
twenty-second year of Henry VIII. He married Mar- 
garet, daughter of John Heneage of Hainton and 
widow of John Bohan of Drilby. Her will, dated 24 
January, 1559-60, was proved 25 July, 1562. By her 
he had issue: 

5. William Sandon, who was aged twenty-three in 
1545. His will was proved 12 March, 1558-59. He 
married Frances, and had issue : 

6. Katherine Sandon, first daughter, who married 
Edward Asfordby of Billesby, son and heir of Andrew 
Asfordby. They had issue: 

7. William Asfordby of Billesby and Asfordby, son 
and heir, who married Eleanor, daughter of John New- 
comen of Saltfleetby All Saints, and had issue : 

8. John Asfordby of Saltfleetby, son and heir, 

38 





^ei]i|j|iipi 



i 



BEATTY-ASFORDBY 41 

whose wife was Alice, daughter of William Wolley of 
Cumberworth. By her he had issue: 

9. William Asfordby of Stayne-in-the-Marsh, Coun- 
ty Lincoln, England, and Kingston and Marbletown, 
Ulster County, New York, son and heir, whose wife 
was Martha, daughter of William Burton of Burgh-in- 
the-Marsh. They had issue : 

10. Susanna Asfordby, eldest surviving daughter 
and co-heiress, who married John Beatty of Kingston 
and Marbletown, Ulster County, New York. 



NEWCOMEN 

Arms: Quarterly of six; 1 and 6, argent, a lions 
head erased sahle, between three crescents gules (New- 
comen) ; 2, satle, on a chevron argent, three escallops of 
the field (King of Gainsborough) ; 3, gules, a chevron 
engrailed between three rests or (Greenfield) ; 4, gules, 
on a I) end argent, three lions faces vert (Stevenson of 
Boston) ; 5, sable, a chevron between three lions faces 
within a bordure all argent (Fereby of York). 

Crest: A lions gamb erased and erect sable, armed 
gules. 

Motto : Numine nitor. 

1. Hugh le Newcomen of Saltfleetby, the name of 
whose wife is unknown, had issue: 

2. Andrew le Newcomen, son and heir, the name of 
whose wife is not known. He had issue: 

3. Walter le Newcomen, son and heir, the name of 
whose wife is not known. He had issue: 

4. Gilbert le Newcomen, son and heir, the name of 
whose wife is not known. He had issue : 

5. Walter le Newcomen, son and heir, the name of 
whose wife is not known. He had issue : 

6. Eobert le Newcomen, son and heir, who was liv- 
ing in 1304-05, the name of his wife not known. He 
had issue: 

7. Eobert le Newcomen, son and heir, living in 
1316-17, the name of whose wife is not known. He 
had issue: 

8. William le Newcomen, son and heir, living in 
1365, the name of his wife not knowm. He had issue : 

9. Robert Newcomen, son and heir, who died in 
1452. His wife was Joan, daughter of Robert Cra- 

42 




-fkiTigimiri 



I 



BEATTY-ASFOEDBY 46 

croft of Cracroft Hall in Hogsthorpe. She was men- 
tioned in the will of her brother, John Cracroft, 9 
October, 1489. By her Kobert Newcomen had issue: 

10. William Newcomen of Saltfieetby, son and heir, 
who died in 1466. He married Alice, daughter and 
heiress of William King of Gainsborough, merchant. By 
her he had issue : 

11. Martin Newcomen of Saltfieetby, son and heir, 
whose will, dated 1 May, 1536, was proved 28 April, 
1540. He married Mary, dauohter of Bryan Sandford 
of Thorpe Salyin, County York. Her will, dated in 
1544, was proved 1 September, 1545. They had issue : 

12. Bryan Newcomen of Saltfieetby, son and heir, 
who was executor to his father in 1540. His first wife 
was Margaret, daughter and co-heiress of John Green- 
field. At her death he married Anne, daughter of 
Nicholas Purley. By his first wife he had issue: 

13. John Newcomen of Saltfieetby, son and heir, 
who was buried 2 March, 1588-89. His will, dated 20 
April, 1.^88, was proved in 1589. His wife was Alice, 
daughter of John Gascoigne of Lansingcroft, County 
York. She Avas buried at Saltfieetby, 28 March, 1559. 
They had issue : 

14. John Newcomen of Saltfieetby, 1592, son and 
heir, who was buried 1 May, 1621. His will, dated 29 
January, 1616-17, was proved 15 May, 1621. He mar- 
ried Mary, daughter of Jofffa Skipwith of Walmsgate. 
Her will was proved 20 October, 1627. By her he had 
issu'e : 

15. Eleanor Newcomen, eldest child, who, baptized 
at Saltfieetby, 10 November, 1576, was married there, 
20 April, 1597, to William Asfordby of Billesby and 
Asfordby, and was buried at Saltfieetb}^, 9 November, 
1634. They had issue: 

16. John Asfordby of Saltfieetby, son and heir, 
whose wife was Alice, daughter of William Wolley of 
Cumberworth. They had issue: 

17. William Asfordby of Stayne-in-the-Marsh, 



46 BEATTY-ASFORDBY 

County Lincoln, England, and Kingston and Marble- 
town, Ulster County, New York, son and heir. He 
married Martha, daughter of William Burton of 
Burgh-in-the-Marsh, and had issue: 

18. Susanna Asfordby, eldest surviving daughter 
and co-heiress, who married John Beatty of Kingston 
and Marbletown, Ulster County, New York. 



I 



i 



4 



WOLLEY 

Arms: Argent, 07i a chevron sable, an eagle dis- 
played of the field. 

Crest : On a mount vert, a lion couchant argent. 

1. John WoUey of County Dorset, by a wife whose 
name is not known, had issue : 

2. William Wolle}^, second son, who proved his 
father's will in 1541. He was called "the elder." The 
name of his wife is not known. He had issue: 

3. William Wolley of Cumberworth, called "the 
younger." He was legatee of his grandfather, in 1540, 
and died in 1590. His wife, Isabel, was a daughter of 
Hooker of Newton, County Dorset. Her will, dated 4 
April, 1590, was proved the following May. They had 
issue : 

4. William Wolley of Cumberworth, where he was 
baptized, 8 September, 1568. He was executor to his 
mother, in 1590, and to his uncle, Robert Wolley, in 
1617-18. He was buried at Cumberworth, 17 August, 
1638. He was married four times, his first wife being 
Margaret, daughter of Peter Crewe of Crewe, Cheshire. 
He married, second, at Caistor, 5 June, 1604, Anne or 
Agnes, daughter of Eoger Lemyng of Barnetby. She 
was buried at Cumberworth, 27 July, 1614. His third 
wife was Susan, daughter of Thomas Kent of Scam- 
blesby. The fourth wife was Anne, daughter of John 
Kirkman of East Keal. Bv his second wife, Anne 
Lemyng, William Wolley had issue : 

5. Alice Wolley, twin of her brother, Robert. She 
was baptized at Cumberworth, 14 December, 1610, and 
was married there, 14 October, 1634, to John Asfordby 

47 



48 BEATTY-ASFOEDBY 

of Saltfleetby. She was buried 16 June, 1638. By John 
Asfordby she had issue : 

6. ^Yilliam x^sfordby of Stayne-in-the-Marsh, Coun- 
ty Lincoln, England, and Kingston and Marbletown, 
Ulster County, New York, son and heir. By his wife, 
Martha, daughter of William Burton of Burgh-in-the- 
Marsh, he had issue : 

7. Susanna Asfordby, eldest surviving daughter and i 
co-heiress, who married John Beatty of Kingston and " 
Marbletown, Ulster County, New York. 



i 
i 



i 



I', 



QUADEING 

Arms : Quarterly of six; 1 and 6, ermine, a fesse en- 
grailed gules (Quadring) ; 2, argent, a chevron he- 
tween three leverets courant sable (Leverett) ; 3, er- 
mine, a fesse gules (Bernack) ; 4, argent, a hend be- 
tween six cross crosslets fitche azure; 5, argent, on a 
saltire, sable, five duchs of the field (Burgh). 

Crest: A Moor's head affronte proper, couped be- 
low the shoulders and wreathed about the temples 
argent and gules. 

1. Richard Quadring of Quadring, County Lincoln, 
England, married Catherine, daughter and heiress of 
William Levericke of Irby, County Lincoln, by whom 
he had issue: 

2. William Quadring of Irby, who married, first. 
Agnes, daughter of Thomas Kyme, and, second, Joan, 
daughter of Totoft, by whom he had issue: 

3. Elizabeth Quadring, a daughter, who married 
John Langton of Langton, whose will was proved at 
Lincoln, 5 February, 1533-34. They had issue : 

4. Alexander Langton, second son and heir of his 
eldest brother, John Langton. Alexander Langton's 
wife was Cicely, daughter of John Billesby, by whom 
he had issue: 

5. Jane Langton, a daughter, who married Andrew 
Asf ordby. They had issue : 

6. Edward Asfordby of Billesby, son and heir, who 
by his wife, Katherine, daughter of William Sandon of 
Ashby-by-Partney, had issue : 

7. William Asfordby of Billesby and Asfordby, son 
and heir, who married Eleanor, daughter of John New- 
comen of Saltfleetby All Saints, and had issue : 

51 



52 BEATTY-ASFORDBY 

8. John Asfordby of Saltfleetby, son and heir, who 
married Alice, daughter of William Wolley of Cumber- 
worth, and had issue: 

9. William Asfordby of Stayne-in-the-Marsh, Coun- 
ty Lincoln, England, and Kingston and Marbletown, 
Ulster Count}^ New York, son and heir, who by his 
wife, Martha, daughter of William Burton of Burgh- 
in-the-Marsh, had issue: 

10. Susanna Asfordby, eldest surviving daughter 
and co-heiress, who married John Beatty of Kingston 
and Marbletown, Ulster County, New York. 



I 



i 



I 



FULNETBY 

Arms: Quarterly; 1 and 4, gules, three crescents 
argent, a chief ermine (Fulnetby) ; 3 and 3, argent, 
three towers gules (Towers). 

1. Thomas Fulnetby married Mary, daughter of 
Thomas Grant, and had issue : 

2. Sir Jeffry Fulnetby of Fulnetby, Knight, who 
married the daughter and heiress of Lambert, and had 
issue : 

3. Sir John Fulnetby of Fulnetby, Knight, who 
married Maude, daughter of Sir Thomas Bratofte, 
Knight, and by her had issue : 

4. John Fulnetby, who had a charter of Free War- 
ren in Fulnetby in the fifth year of Edward III. 
(1331). His wife was Anne, daughter and heiress of 
Francis Colville. By her he had issue : 

5. Thomas Fulnetby, Sheriff of Lincolnshire from 
1355 to 1358 and from 1369 to 1372. He married 
Mary, daughter of Thomas Craycrofte, and had issue: 

6. William Fulnetby of Fulnetby, second son, who 
married Maude, daughter of Sir Thomas Mussenden, 
Knight. They had issue : 

7. William Fulnetby of Fulnetby, who married 
Elizabeth Bagrave or Burgan. By her he had issue: 

8. John Fulnetby, whose wife was Elinor, daugh- 
ter of Patrick Skipwith. They had issue : 

9. John Fulnetby, who married Jane, daughter and 
heiress of Thomas Towers of Boothby, and had issue : 

10. John Fulnetby, who married a daughter of 
Gerard Southill, and had issue : 

11. John Fulnetby, whose first wife was Elizabeth, 
daughter and heiress of John Eland. His second wife 

55 



56 BEATTY-ASFORDBY 

was a daughter of Sir Lionel Dyinoke^ Knight. By his 
first wife he had issue : 

12. Elizabeth Fiilnetby, co-heiress of her mother, 
Elizabeth Eland. She married Sir William Sandon, 
Knight, and had issue: 

13. Arthur Sandon, who married Margaret, daugh- 
ter of John Heneage of Hainton and widow of John 
Bohan of Drilbv. By her he had issue : 

14. William Sandon, who married Frances, and had 
issue : 

15. Katherine Sandon, eldest daughter, who mar- 
ried Edward Asfordby of Billesby. They had issue : 

16. William Asfordby of Billesby and Asfordby, 
son and heir, who married Eleanor, daughter of John 
Newcomen of Saltfleetby All Saints, and had issue: 

17. John Asfordby of Saltfleetby, son and heir, 
who married Alice, daughter of William Wolley of 
Cumberworth, and had issue: 

18. William Asfordby of Sta3rQe-in-the-Marsh, 
County Lincoln, England, and Kingston and Marble- 
town, Ulster County, New York, son and heir, whose 
wife was Martha, daughter of William Burton of 
Burgh-in-the-Marsh. By her he had issue : 

19. Susanna Asfordby, eldest surviving daughter 
and co-heiress, who married John Beatty of Kingston 
and Marbletown, Ulster County, New York. 




Mulm 



i 



CEACEOFT 

Arms: Per pale, vert and gules, on a bend indented 
argent, three ^nartlets sable. 

Crest : A stork proper, supporting with his dexter 
foot a battle-axe, staff or, headed argent. 

1. Walter de Cracroft had issue: 

2. Stephen de Cracroft, who lived in the reign of 
Henry III. He had issue: 

3. William de Cracroft of Cracroft, living in the 
fifty-fourth year of Henry III., and also under Edward 
I. He had issue: 

4. Robert de Cracroft of Hoggesthorpe, heir to his 
brother in the sixteenth year of Edward II. (1322-23). 
He married Alice, daughter of Eobert de Gunby, and 
had issue: 

5. John Cracroft of Hoggesthorpe, son and heir, 
baptized at Hoggesthorpe, 13 March, 1334-35; aged 
twenty-four on 13 March, in thirty-third year of Ed- 
ward III. (1358-59), when he proved his age. His 
wife was Katherine, daughter of Eobert Westmeales of 
Skegness, sister and heir of Walter de Westmeales. By 
her he had issue : 

6. Eobert Cracroft of Cracroft in Hoggesthorpe, 
who married Agnes, and had issue: 

7. John Cracroft of Cracroft in Hoggesthorpe in the 
tenth year of Henry V. He married the daughter and 
heiress of Stickney, and had issue : 

8. Eobert Cracroft of Cracroft Hall in the parish of 
Hoggesthorpe in the third, fourth, and thirteenth years 
of Henry VI. He married Alice, daughter and heiress 
of William Eathby of Horsington, and had issue: 

59 



60 BEATTY-ASFORDBY 

9. Joana Cracroft, living in 1490. She married 
Robert Newconien. They had issue: 

10. William Newconien of Saltfleetby, whose wife 
was Alice, daughter and heiress of William King of 
Gainsborough. They had issue: 

11. Martin Xewcomen of Saltfleetby, whose wife 
was Mary, daughter of Bryan Sanford of Thorpe Sal- 
vin. County York. They had issue: 

12. Bryan Newconien of Saltfieetby, son and heir, 
who by his first wife, Margaret, daughter and co- 
heiress of John Greenfield, had issue: 

13. John Newconien of Saltfleetby, who married 
Alice, daughter of John Gascoigne of Lasingcroft, 
County York, and by her had issue : 

14. John Newconien of Saltfleetby, whose wife was 
Mary, daughter of John Skipwith of Walmsgate. By 
her he had issue: 

15. Eleanor Newcomen, eldest child and daughter, 
who married William Asfordby of Asfordby and 
Billesby, Newark-on-Trent, and Saltfleetby, by whom 
she had issue: 

16. John Asfordby of Saltfleetby, son and heir, who 
married Alice, daughter of William Wolley of Cum- 
berworth, and had issue: 

17. William Asfordby of Stayne-in-the-^Iarsh, 
County Lincoln, England, and Kingston and Marble- 
town, Ulster County, New York, son and heir. He 
married Martha, daughter of William Burton of 
Burgh-in-the-Marsh, and had issue : 

18. Susanna Asfordby, eldest surviving daughter 
and co-heiress, who married John Beatty of Kingston 
and Marbletown, Ulster County, New York. 





w 



GASCOIGNE 

Arms : Quarterly of eight; 1 and S, or, on a pale 
sable, a demi luce erect, couped or (Gascoigne) ; 2, 
argent, on a bend gules, three leopard's faces of the 
field (Bolton) ; 3, vert, a saUire engrailed or 
(Franke) ; 4, gules, a saltire engrailed or, a mullet for 
difference (Clitherow of Salisbury) ; 5, gules, a lion 
rampant or, maned argent (Grace) ; 6, vert, a lion 
rampant within a bordure engrailed argent (Heyton) ; 
7, or, a fesse dancettee sable, in the dexter chief a cross 
crosslet of the second for difference. 

Crest: Out of a ducal coronet or, a demi luce erect 
of the last. 

1. William Gascoigne, who had issue: 
3. William Gascoigne, who had issue: 

3. William Gascoigne, who had issue: 

4. William Gascoigne of Harewood. He had issue: 

5. William Gascoigne of Harewood, who married 
Matilda (or Jane), the daughter and co-heiress of 
John de Gawkethorpe (or Goldthorpe), of Gawke- 
thorpe, and the granddaughter of Henry de Gawke- 
thorpe, by his wife, the daughter and heiress of Hillum. 
They had issue: 

6. William Gascoigne, of Kirkby and Gawkethorpe, 
County York, in the reign of Edward I., who purchased 
lands in Harewood and elsewhere in the first year of 
Edward II. He married Elizabeth, the daughter and 
heiress of William Bolton of Aldwark, in 1300. By 
her he had issue: 

7. William Gascoigne of Harewood, living in the 
reigns of Edward II. and III. He married Agnes, the 

63 



64 BEATTY-ASFOEDBY 

daughter and co-heiress of William Franke, or Mar- 
garet, daughter and co-heiress of Nicholas Franke. He 
had a son: 

8. Nicholas Gascoigne of Lasingcroft, parish of 
Barwick, in Elniete, who married, about the thirteenth 
year of Kichard II., Mary, the daughter and heiress 
of Cliderow of Salesbury, County Lancaster. By her 
he had issue: 

9. John Gascoigne of Lasingcroft, son and heir, 
who was administrator, 8 July, 1445. His wife was 
Isabel, the daughter and heiress of William Heton of 
Mirfield. She died 3 August, 1473. They had issue: 

10. William Gascoigne of Lasingcroft, son and heir, 
who married, in the fourth year of Edw^ard IV., Joan- 
etta, the daughter of Sir William Beckwith of Clint. 
She was living 15 April of the seventeenth year of Ed- 
ward IV. William Gascoigne died the year before. 
Their son was: 

11. William Gascoigne of Lasingcroft, who died 
about 25 July in the twelfth year of Henry VIII. He 
married Margaret, the daughter of Eichard Kighley 
of Newhall, and had issue: 

12. John Gascoigne of Lasingcroft and Aberford, 
only son and heir. He was twenty-six years of age in 
the eleventh year of Edward IV., and died 20 or 22 
November, 1557. His wife was Ann, the daughter of 
John, third son of Sir Henry Vavasour of Haselwood, 
County York, Knight. By her he had issue : 

13. Alice Gascoigne, sixth daughter, who was buried 
at Saltfleetby, County Lincoln, 28 March, 1559. She 
was married to John Newcomen of Saltfleetby. They 
had issue : 

14. John Newcomen of Saltfleetby, who married 
Mary, daughter of John Skipwith of Walmsgate. They 
had issue: 

15. Eleanor Newcomen, eldest child, who was mar- 
ried to William Asfordby of Asfordby, Billesby, New- 
ark-on-Trent, and Saltfleetby. Their son was: 





a^risiMiAie 



1 

I 



BEATTY-ASFOEDBY 67 

16. John Asfordby of Saltfleetby, who married 
Alice, daughter of William WoUey of Cumberworth. 
By her he had issue : 

17. William Asfordby of Stayne-in-the-Marsh, 
County Lincoln, England, and Kingston and Marble- 
town, Ulster County, New York. He married Martha, 
daughter of W^illiam Burton of Burgh-in-the-Marsh, 
and had issue: 

18. Susanna Asfordby, eldest surviving daughter 
and co-heiress, who married John Beatty of Kingston 
and Marbletown, Ulster County, New York. 



BECKWITH 

Arms: Quarterly; 1 and 4, argent, a chevron he- 
tiveen three hind's heads erased gules (Beckwith) ; 2 
and o, gules, six lions rampant argent, crowned or 
(Heslerton). 

Crest: An antelope proper, in the mouth a branch 
vert. 

1. Hugh de Malebisse held lands in Yorkshire in 
the reign of William "the Conqueror.'^ One of his 
sons: 

2. Hugo de Malebisse was living in 1138 A.D., and 
made his will in the third year of King Stephen. He 
married Emma de Percy, by whom he had, among other 
children, two sons, as follows: 



3. Richard de Malebisse, who 
had Warrenham and Scalton, 
near York, in the first year of 
King John; was lord chief for- 
ester of the forest of Galtres 
Denvent and Wernerdale, in the 
reign of Richard I. ; was Chief 
Justice of Assize in the fourth 
year of John ; founded the mon- 
astery of Neubo, County Lin- 
coln, in 1198; had large pos- 
sessions, including x\caster, near 
York; and left issue: 



3. Sir Simon Male- 
bisse, lord of Cow- 
ton, in Craven, who 
married a dau2:hter 
of John, lord of 
Methby, and had is- 
sue: 



4. John de Male- 
bisse who, in the 
fourteenth year of 



4. Sir Hercules Malebisse, third 
son, who changed his name to 
Beckwith on his marriage, in 

68 




*eelEteiif| 



1 



I 



i 



4 



i 



BEATTY-ASFORDBY 



71 



King John, con- 
firmed the grants 
his father, Rich- 
a r d , had made 
from Morton 
Grange to the Ab- 
bot of Neubo. He 
had issue: 



5. William de Malebisse, who 
confirmed grants to Byland Ab- 
bey in the twenty-ninth year of 
Henry III. He married Matilda, 
the daughter and co-heiress of 
Ealph ISTeville, by whom he had 
issue : 



1226, to Lady Dame Beckwith, 
the daughter of Sir William 
Bruce. He was lord of Ugle- 
barnby. He had a son: 



5. Sir Hercules 
Beckwith, who 
married a daugh- 
ter of Sir John 
Ferrers, of Tam- 
worth Castle, by 
whom he had is- 
sue: 



6. William de Malebisse, 
who gave lands to the 
Priory of Bridlington in 
the fifty-first year of 
Henry III., and had is- 
sue: 



6. Nicholas Beckwith, 
who married a daughter 
of Sir John Chaworth, 
and had issue: 



7. Sir Richard 7. Hamon Beckwith, who, in 1339, 
de Malebisse, took upon him a coat-of-arms inci- 
"Miles," in the dent to John, Lord Malebisse, and 
fourth year of was, the same year, seized of the 
Edward 11. He lordship of Clint, bounding on the 
had issue: north side of Mdd juxte Hampes- 

thwait, of Uglebarnby in Whitby, 
Strand, lands in Pickering and 
Roxby, and the manors of Beck- 
with and Beckwithshaw. He mar- 
ried a daughter of Sir Philip Tyl- 
ney. Knight, and had a son: 

8. Sir John, Lord Male- 8. William Beckwith of 
bisse, "Miles, Viuconues Beckwith, Esquire, ip 



72 



BEATTY-x^SFORDBY 



Ebor," high sheriff of 
County York in 1314, 
who married Agnes, the 
daughter of Sir Edward 
Willstrope, and had issue : 



9. Sir William de Male- 
bisse, "Miles," in the 
twelfth year of Edward 
III., who married a 
daughter of Sir John 
Sampson, '^Miles," and 
had a son : 

10. Sir Thomas de Male- 
bisse, "Miles," thirty- 
eight of Edward III., who 
had issue : 

11. Elizabeth Malebisse, 
co-heiress, who married, 
first, John Heringe, in the 
thirty-eighth year of Ed- 
ward III., and, second, 
Adam Beckwith, by whom 
she had issue: 



1364 seized of the manors 
of Beckwith and Beck- 
wdthshaw, who married a 
daughter of Sir Gerard 
Usfleet of Wighill, County 
York, and had issue : 

9. Thomas Beckwith, 
who, in the fourth year of 
Richard II., was seized of 
Clint, the manor of Mag- 
na Otrington, Hornby 
near Thurske, which land 
he held of John, Lord 
Mowbray, as of the lat- 
ter's manor of Thurske. 
He married a daughter of 
John Sawley of Saxton, 
by whom he had issue: 

10. Adam Beckwith of 
Clint, who married, in the 
fourth year of Richard 
II., Elizabeth, the widow 
of John Heringe and the 
daughter and co-heiress of 
Sir Thomas de Male- 
bisse, by whom he had 
issue : 



11 and 12. Sir William Beckwith, de Clint, Knight, 
who married a daughter of Sir John Baskervile, and 
had issue: 

13. Thomas Beckwith, de Clint, Armiger, lord of a 
third part of the manors of Filey, Muston, and Thorp, 
j. u. He died in the tenth year of Henry VII. His 
wife, the daughter and co-heiress of Sir William Hes- 
lerton, and heiress of a third part of the manors of 
Filey, Muston, and Thorp, inherited from Hawisia, 
the other daughter and co-heiress of the above-named 



BEATTY-ASFORDBY 73 

Ralph Neville (see fifth generation above). By her 
Thomas Beckwith had issue: 

14. Sir William Beckwith of Clint, Knight, 1481, 
who, by his first wife, Elizabeth, the daughter of Sir 
William Plumpton of Plumpton, had issue: 

15. Jennet Beckwith, who married William Gas- 
coigne of Lasingcroft. Their son was: 

16. William Gascoigne of Lasingcroft, who died 
about 25 July in the twelfth year of Henry VIII. He 
married Margaret, the daughter of Richard Kighley of 
Newhall, and had issue : 

17. John Gascoigne of Lasingcroft and Aberford, 
only son and heir. His wife was Ann, the daughter of 
John, third son of Sir Henry Vavasour of Hazelwood, 
County York, Knight. By her he had issue : 

18. Alice Gascoigne, sixth daughter, who was mar- 
ried to John Newcomen of Saltfleetby, ^nd by him had 
issue : 

19. John Newcomen of Saltfleetby, who married 
Mary, daughter of John Skipwith of Walmsgate. Their 
eldest child was : 

20. Eleanor Newcomen, who married William As- 
fordby of Asfordby, Billesby, Newark-on-Trent, and 
Saltfleetby. Their son was: 

21. John Asfordby of Saltfleetby, who married 
Alice, the daughter of William Wolley of Cumber- 
worth, and had issue: 

22. William Asfordby of Stayne-in-the-Marsh, 
County Lincoln, England, and Kingston and Marble- 
town, Ulster County, New York. He married Martha, 
daughter of William Burton of Burgh-in-the-Marsh, 
and had issue: 

23. Susanna Asfordby, the eldest surviving daugh- 
ter and co-heiress, who was married to John Beatty of 
Kingston and Marbletown, Ulster County, New York. 



PLUMPTON 

Arms: Quarterly; 1, azure, five fusils in fess or, 
each charged with an escallop gules (Plumpton) ; 2 and 
3, sahle, a bend between six escallops or (Foljambe) ; 4, 
argent, six lions rampant azure, three, two, one. 

1. Eldred, held lands in Plumpton of William de 
Percy, as appears in Domesday Book. He had issue : 

2. Sir Peter de Plumpton, who married Helena. 
Among other children he had a son : 

3. Nigel de Plumpton, newly enfeoffed by William 
Percy, 1168. He died about 1205. By his second wife, 
Juliana de Warwick, the daughter of Eichard de War- 
wick, he had a son : 

4. Kobert de Plumpton, living in 10 Henry III. He 
died in 1244. His wife was a daughter of Mowbray 
and by her he had a son: 

5. Nigel de Plumpton, who was heir in 1244. He 
held Idell, County York, of the Earl of Lincoln, 29 
Edward L, and died 55 Henry III., 1271. His wife 
was Avica de Clare, by whom he had : 

6. Sir Robert de Plumpton, his second son, living 
16 Edward I., 1275. He died 26 Edward I., having 
held one moiety of Plumpton, of the heirs of Percy, 
and the other moiety of John de Vescy. He married 
Isabella, the daughter of Serlo de Westwick, Lady of 
the Manor of Gersington, or Grassington, in Craven, by 
whom he had : 

7. Sir Robert de Plumpton, eldest son, 2 Edward II. 
He held three carucates of land in Idle, 18 Edward I., 
and was Lord of Plumpton, 9 Edward II. He died 19 
Edward II., 1325. His wife, Lucy, the daughter of 

74 



X 



BEATTY-ASFORDBY 77 

Sir William de Eoos, by Eustachia Gresley, was living, 
a widow, in 5 Edward III., 1332. By her he had : 

8. Sir William de Plumpton, eldest son and heir, 
who petitioned Parliament for his rights in the forest 
of Knaresboro, 5 Edward III. He was a knight, 13 
Edward III., founded a chantry at Ripon, 19 Edward 
III., was Knight of the Shire, 23 Edward III., and 
High Sheriff of Yorkshire in 1351. He died in 1362. 
Twice married, by his second wife, Christiana Mow- 
bra}^, the widow of Richard de Emildon, Alderman of 
Newcastle, he had issue : 

9. Sir Robert Plumpton, 47 Edward III., eldest 
child and only son, who was in the Navy. He was 
fort3'-fxVe years old in 1365, and died 8 Henry IV. His 
will was dated in February, 1407, and proved the same 
year. He was twice married. By his first wife, Isa- 
bella, the daughter of Richard, Lord Scroope, and the 
sister of Richard Scroope, Archbishop of York, he had 
a son : 

10. Sir William Plumpton, who was in the service 
of King Richard II. He was beheaded in 1405, dur- 
ing the lifetime of his father, and was buried at Spof- 
forth. His wife was Alice Gisburn, the daughter and 
co-heiress of John de Gisburn, Alderman of York. 

11. Sir Robert Plumpton, of Plumpton, County 
York, son and heir. He was aged twenty-four, 8 Henry 
IV., 1407. He died 8 December, 1421, and was buried 
in the Plumpton Quire, Spofforth Church. His second 
wife was Alice, daughter and heiress of Sir Geoffery 
Foljambe of Hassop, County Derby, who was aged eight 
years in 1393, and was married 16 Richard II., 14 Jan- 
uary, 1392-93. She died before 3 Henry V., 1416, and 
was buried at Spofforth, leaving issue : 

12. Sir William de Plumpton, Knight, eldest son 
and heir. He was born 7 October, 6 Henry IV., 1404. 
He was in ward to Henry, Earl of Northumberland, 
High Sheriff of Yorkshire, in 1448, and died 15 Octo- 
ber, 20 Edward IV., 1480, as per inquest, seised of the 



78 BEATTY-ASFOEDBY 

Manors of Garsington, Steeton, etc. He was twice 
married. By his first wife, Elizabeth, the daughter of 
Sir Brian Stapleton of Carlton, Knight, whom he mar- 
ried, 20 January, 1415-16, he had: 

13. Elizabeth Plumpton, his third child and eldest 
daughter. She married William, son and heir of 
Thomas Beckwith of Clint, Esquire, 34 Henry IV. 
They had issue: 

14. Joanetta, or Jennet, Beckwith, who married 
William Gascoigne of Lasingcroft. Their son was : 

15. William Gascoigne of Lasingcroft, who m^ar- 
ried Margaret, daughter of Eichard Kighley of ISTew- 
hall, and had issue: 

16. John Gascoigne of Lasingcroft and Aberfcrd, 
only son and heir. By his wife, Ann, daughter of 
John, third son of Sir Henry Vavasour of Hazelwood, 
County York, Knight, he had issue : 

17. Alice Gascoigne, sixth daughter, who was mar- 
ried to John Newcomen of Saltfleetby, and by him had 
issue : 

18. John Newcomen of Saltfleetby, who married 
Mary, daughter of John Skipwith of W^almsgate. Their 
eldest child was: 

19. Eleanor Newcomen, who married William As- 
fordby of Asfordby, Billesby, ISTewark-on-Trent, and 
Saltfleetby. Their son was : 

20. John Asfordby of Saltfleetby. By his wife, 
Alice, daughter of William Wolley of Cumberworth, 
he had issue : 

21. Honorable William Asfordby of Stayne-in-the- 
Marsh, County Lincoln, England, and Kingston and 
Marbletown, Ulster County, New York, eldest son and 
heir. He married Martha, daughter of William Bur- 
ton of Burgh-in-the-]\Iarsh, and by her had issue: 

22. Susanna Asfordby, the eldest surviving daugh- 
ter and co-heiress, who was married to John Beatty of 
Kingston and Marbletown, Ulster County, New York. 



VAVASOUR 

Arms: Or, a fesse dancettee sable, in the dexter chief 
a cross crosslet of the second for difference. 

Crest : A cock gules, charged on the breast with a 
fountain for difference. 

1. Sir Manger le Vavasour derived his name from 
his office of vavasour, or magnate, to the King. His 
son was : 

2. Sir Mauger le Vavasour, who gave to the monks 
of Salley the mill of Hunslet. He had issue: 

3. Sir William le Vavasour, Knight, Lord of Hazel- 
wood, who confirmed, in the reign of Henry I., the gift 
of his father to the monks of Salley. He was a Judge, 
30 Henry II., 1184; one of the witnesses to the charter 
of the Abbey of Sawley, County York; and held two 
knight's fees of Sir William de Percy in 1187. He had 
issue : 

4. Sir Eobert le Vavasour, eldest child and heir. 
He was High Sheriff of Nottinghamshire, 21 Henry 
III., 1236, and of Derby, from 31 Henry III. until his 
death. He was granted free warren in Werverdale by 
King John, 14 March, 1204, of which to make a park, 
if he so pleased, and had custody of the Tower of 
Peverell. He died 38 Henry III., ^1254. By his wife, 
Julian, daughter of Thomas de Multon, he had issue : 

5. Sir John le Vavasour, Knight, Lord of Hazel- 
wood, a minor and in the custody of Eobert de Coke- 
field, Sheriff of County York, in 1231. He had a grant 
of free warren in Wodehall, Sikelinghall, Addingham, 
and Scardecrofte, in 36 Henry III. ; gave stone from 
his quarry of Theves-dale, now called "Jackdaw,'' to 
the Abbeys and Convents of Thornton, St. Peter and 

79 



80 BEATTY-ASrOEDBY 

Howden, to build their ^'charges" (churches), and to 
repair other edifices; and died before 1285. By his 
wife, Alice, daughter of Sir Eobert Cockfield, Knight, 
he had issue: 

6. Sir William le Vavasour, of Hazelwood, which 
he had licence from the king to castellate, 18 Edward I. 
In 23 Edward I. he did homage for all lands and tene- 
ments which Alice, his mother, held of the king. He 
was engaged in the Gascoigne and Scotch wars, and was 
summoned anions: the barons to Parliament from 28 
Edward I. to 6 Edward 11. He was keeper of the 
Castles of ISTottingham, Harston, and Bolsover, in the 
reign of Henry III. In 20 Edward I. he bought of the 
king, for thirty marks, the houses in the parish of St. 
Martin, Coney Street, York, which belonged to Bon- 
amy the Jew, when the Jews were expelled from that 
city. He had custody of the city of York, 5 Edward II., 
and was at Caerlaverock in 1300. He gave to the 
Archbishop and Chapter of York, from the above men- 
tioned quarry of Thevesdale, the stones from which the 
noble edifice, York Minster, was erected. He founded 
St. Leonard's Chapel, on his castle at Hazelwood. He 
died 6 Edward II., his will, dated in 1311, directing 
thnt he be buried in the new chapel of St. Leonard at 
Hazelwood. His wife was Nichola, daughter of Sir 
Stephen Wallis of Newton, Knight. She held Bilton 
and Helaugh in 1316. They had issue: 

7. Sir Henry le Vavasour, who was joint Lord of 
Draghton in 1316. He was living in 20 Edward III., 
and died in 1349, being buried in the Abbey of Louth, 
County Lincoln. He was acquitted of a debt of five 
hundred marks by Lord Fitzhugh, on condition of his 
son's marrying that lord's daughter. In 16 Edward 
III., he granted the manor of Bilton to Thomas Davall 
and Isabella, his wife. He married Constance, daugh- 
ter of Sir William Mowbray, Knight, who survived her 
husband. They had issue : 

8. Sir Henry Vavasour of Hazelwood, Knight. He 




inljiiMi^^r 



BEATTY-ASFORDBY 83 

married, in 20 Edward II,, Annabell, daughter of 
Henry, Lord Fitzhugh of Ravensworth Castle. They 
had issue: 

9. Sir William Yavasonr of Hazelwood, Stubs, and 
Woodhall, 0. v. p. in 1375. He married Elizabeth, 
daughter of William Stapleton of Edenhall, County 
Cumberland, by whom he had: 

10. Sir Henry Yavasour of Hazelwood, Knight, heir 
to his elder brother in 1387. His will was proved 29 
March, 1413. In it he directed that he be buried in 
"my chapel at Hesilwood." His wife was Margaret, 
daughter of Sir William Skipwith of Ormsby, County 
Lincoln, Chief Justice of England. They had issue: 

11. William Yavasour, eldest son. He died 10 Jan- 
uary, 1452. His wife was Elizabeth, daughter of Sir 
John Langton of Langton and Hudleston, Knight. 
They had issue: 

12. Sir Henry Yavasour of Hazelwood, Knight, 
eldest son and heir. He was High Sheriff of York- 
shire, 10 Edward lY., 1470. With his son, William, 
he was admitted to Corpus Christi, York, in 1479. His 
will was dated 8 September, 1499, and proved 15 April, 
L500. In it he directed his executors to bury him in 
the chapel of St. Leonard in Hazelwood. His wife was 
Joane, daughter of Sir William Gascoigne of Gaw- 
thorpe. Knight. They had issue: 

13. John Yavasour of Scarborough, County York, 
third child. He married Cicely, daughter of Langdale, 
by whom he had issue: 

14. Anne Yavasour, heiress of her parents. She 
was twice married, her first husband being John Gas- 
coigne of Lasingcroft. By him she had issue: 

15. Alice Gascoigne, sixth daughter, who was mar- 
ried to John Newcomen of Saltfleetby, and by him had 
issue : 

16. John Newcomen of Saltfleetby, who married 
Mary, daughter of John Skipwith of Walmsgate. Their 
eldest child was : 



84 BEATTY-ASFOEDBY 

17. Eleanor Newcomen, who married William As- 
fordby of Asfordby, Billesby, Newark-on-Trent, and 
Saltfleetby. Their son was: 

18. John Asfordby of Saltfleetby. By his wife, 
Alice, the daughter of William Wolley of Cumber- 
worth, he had issue : 

19. William Asfordby of Stayne-in-the-Marsh, 
County Lincoln, England, and Kingston and Marble- 
town, Ulster County, New York, eldest son and heir. 
He married Martha, daughter of William Burton of 
Burgh-in-the-Marsh, and by her had issue: 

20. Susanna Asfordby, the eldest surviving daugh- 
ter and co-heiress, who was married to John Beatty of 
Kingston and Marbletown, Ulster County, New York. 



SKIPWITH 

Arms: Quarterly of eight; 1 and 8, argent, three 
bars gules, a greyhound in chief sable, collared or 
(Skipwith) ; 2, argent, a cross lozengy gules (Flyn- 
ton) ; 3, sable, three chessrooks and a chief or, guar- 
tering gules, a bendlet between six crosses crosslet 
fitchee (Ornisby) ; 4, sable, four hawlcs volant or 
(Mure) ; 5, sable, two lions passant argent, crowned 
or (Dymoke) ; 6, azure, a cross between four leopard's 
heads or (Kingston) ; 7, or, a lion rampant, doubh 
queued sable, armed and langued gules (Welles). 

Crest : A reel or turnstile proper. 

Motto : Sans Dieu je ne puis. 

1. Eobert de Estoteville, Baron of Cottingham in 
the time of William the Conqueror, had issue : 

2. Eobert de Estoteville, Baron of Cottingham, who, 
among other lands, Had the lordship of Schypwyc or 
Skipwic. His wife was Eneburga, daughter and heiress 
of Hugh, son of Baldrick, a great Saxon Thane. They 
had issue : 

3. Patrick de Estoteville, third son, w^ho had from 
his father the town and lordship of Skipwith, in the 
East Biding of Yorkshire, from which his descend- 
ants took their name. He married Beatrix, daughter 
and heiress of Sir Pagan de Langtun. By her he had 
issue : 

4. Jeffrey de Schypwith, who married Mariana, 
daughter and heiress of William de Manithorp, and had 
issue : 

5. Sir William de Skipwith, Knight, Lord of Skip- 
with, 1258-59, w^ho, through his wife, became pos- 
sessed of a great estate in Lincolnshire and was the last 

85 



86 BEATTY-ASFORDBY 

of the family who resided at Skipwith. His wife was 
Alice, daughter of Sir John de Thorpe, and sister and 
heiress of Sir William de Thorpe, Knight, Lord of 
Bigby and Thorpe, Lincolnshire. By her he had issue : 

6. Sir John de Skipwith, Knight, sometimes styled 
de Thorpe, of Skipwith and Thorpe. He married Isa- 
bel, daughter and heiress of Sir Robert de Arches, 
Knight, Lord of Wrawby, County Lincoln. They had 
issue : 

7. John de Skipwith of Bigby, County Lincoln. 
His wife was Margaret, daughter and co-heir of Her- 
bert de Flynton of Yorkshire, and by lier he had issue : 

8. William de Skipwith, who died in 1336. He 
married Margaret, daughter of Sir Ralph Fitz Simon 
of South Ormsby, County Lincoln, and sister and 
heiress of Sir Simon Fitz Ralph, Knight. They had 
issue : 

9. Sir William Skipwith, Knight, second son, who 
succeeded his father and brother in 1336: was one of 
the King's Sergeants, 1354; Justice of the Court of 
Common Pleas, 25 October, 1359; Lord Chief Baron 
of the Exchequer, 1362 ; Chief Justice of the King-'s 
Bench in Ireland, 15 February, 1370; Trier of Peti- 
tions in Parliament, 1362, 1363, 1365, 1377-1388, and 
was living in 1392. His wife was Alice, daughter and 
heiress of Sir William de Hiltoft, Knight, Lord of 
Ingoldmells, County Lincoln, by his wife, Alice, sister 
and heiress of Ralph de Muer, Lord of Calthorp and 
Covenham, County Lincoln; and granddaughter of Sir 
William de Hiltoft and his wife, Agnes, daughter and 
co-heiress of William de Mumby of the house of Wil- 
loughby. They had issue: 

10. John Skipwith, Esquire, of Skipwith and South 
Ormsby; High Sheriff of Lincolnshire, 1394; Member 
of Parliament, 1405, 1407, and 1413; died 15 July, 
1415, and was buried at Covenham. His wife was 
Alice, daughter of Sir Frederick Tilney, Knight, of 
Boston. Ij'ncolnshire; she was living in 1431. By her 
he had issue : 



BEATTY-ASFORDBY 89 

11. Sir Thomas Skipwith, Knight, of South Orms- 
by; knighted in France by Henry V. He died 30 No- 
vember, 1417; inquest post mortem, 1418. He mar- 
ried Margaret, daughter of William, fifth Lord Wil- 
loughby de Eresby, who survived her husband and mar- 
ried Sir William Oldhall; she was living in 1440-41. 
By her Sir Thomas Skipwith had issue : 

12. Sir William Skipwith, Knight, aged thirty-four 
weeks in 1418; High Sheriff of Lincolnshire, 1458, 
1465; and died 28 November, 1482; inquest post mor- 
tem, 6 October, 1483. By his second wife, Agnes, 
daughter of Sir John Constable, Knight, of Burton 
Constable, Yorkshire, and widow of Sir Thomas St. 
Quintin, he had issue: 

13. Sir John Skipwith, Knight, of South Ormsby; 
High Sheriff of Lincolnshire, 1493 ; made a Knight 
Banneret at Blackheath in 1497. He married Cather- 
ine, daughter of Sir Richard Fitzwilliam, Knight, of 
Aldwarke, Yorkshire. By her he had issue : 

14. Sir William Skipwith, Knight, of South Orms- 
by, aged thirty in 1518; High Sheriff of Lincolnshire 
in 1527; died 7 July, 1547. His second wife was Alice, 
daughter and co-heiress of Sir Lionel Dymoke, Knight, 
of Mareham-on-the-Hill, Lincolnshire. By her he had 
issue : 

15. John Skipwith of Walmsgate, second son, who 
died previous to 5 November, 1585, when administra- 
tion was granted to his widow. He married Eleanor, 
daughter and heiress of John Kingston of Great 
Grimsby, who died 4 June, 1599. Her will, dated 2 Jan- 
uary, 1593-94, with a codicil, 4 June, 1599, was proved 
31 December, 1599. In it she mentions her brother, 
John Kingston, and Elizabeth Kingston, her niece; her 
daughter, Mary Newcomen, and her son-in-law, John 
Newcomen, with their children at that time surviving. 
She describes herself as "Elinearne Skipwi'^^ of Walms- 
gate in the county of Lincolne, the late wife of John 
Skipwi*^ of the same towne & county, deceased widow." 



90 BEATTY-ASFORDBY 

This will is the connecting and confirmatory link be- 
tween the descendants of Mary Skipwith and John 
Newcomen, and Alice, daughter of Sir Lionel Dymoke, 
descendant of the Plantagenets of England, and the 
mother of the testator's husband. John Skipwith and 
Eleanor Kingston had issue: 

16. Mary Skipwith, whose will, dated 12 March, 
1626-27, was proved 20 October, 1627. Her husband, 
John Newcomen of Saltfleetby, was residuary legatee 
and executor of his mother-in-law, Eleanor Kingston 
Skipwith of Walmsgate. They had issue: 

17. Eleanor Newcomen, legatee of her grandmother, 
Eleanor Skipwith of Walmsgate, and legatee and exec- 
utrix of her mother, Mary Skipwith Newcomen. She 
was married at Saltfleetby 20 April, 1597, to William 
Asfordby of Saltfleetby. They had issue : 

18. John Asfordby, son and heir, legatee of his 
grandmother, Mary Skipwith i^ewcomen. He married 
Alice, daughter of William Wolley of Cumberworth, 
and by her had issue: 

19. William Asfordby of Stayne-in-the-Marsh, 
County Lincoln, England, and Kingston and Marble- 
town, Ulster County, New York. His wife was Martha, 
dausrhter of William Burton of Burijh-in-the-Marsh, 
by whom he had issue : 

20. Susanna Asfordby, eldest survivinsf dauMiter 
and co-heiress, who was married to John Beatty of 
Kingston and Marbletown, Ulster County, New York. 



PLANTAGEXET 

Arms : Gules, three lions passant or. 

1. Pepin of Heristal, Major Domus of Austrasia 
676 A.D., Major Domus of the Franlvs by his victory at 
Testri in 687, styled Dux et Princeps Francorum, by 
his wife, Elphide, had issue : 

3. Charles Martel (''the Hammer"), Duke of Aus- 
trasia, born about 690; Mayor of the Palace in 719; de- 
feated the Saracens between Poitiers and Tours in one 
of the decisive battles of the world, 732. He died in 
741. His wife was Robrude, and by her he had issue: 

3. Pepin le Bref ("the Short"), Major Domus of 
Neustria, 7-11 ; Major Domus of Austrasia in 747 ; 
King of the Franks in 751. He died in 768. His wife 
was Bertha, daughter of Charibert, Count of Laon, and 
by her he had issue : 

4. Charlemagne ("Charles the Great"), born 2 
April. 742. He was joint King of the Franks with his 
brother Karlman from 768 to 771, when he became sole 
King. He was Emperor of the West in 800, and died 
at Aachen, German}^, 28 Januar}', 814. His wife was 
Hildegarde of Swabia, and by her he had issue : 

5. Louis I. le Debonnaire, born in 778, who was 
King of France and Emperor of the West, 814 to 840. 
He died on an island in the Rhine near Maniz, 20 
June, 840. His wife was Judith, daughter of Guelph 
I., and by her he had issue: 

6. Charles, "the Bald," who was King Charles I. of 
France from 848 to 877, and Emperor of Italy from 
875 to 877. He married Hermentrude, daughter of 
Vodon, Earl of Orleans, and by her had issue : 

7. Judith, who was the second wife of Ethelwolf, 

91 



92 BEATTY-ASFORDBY 

King of England^ by whom she had no issue. At his 
death she married Baldwin I., "Bras de fer/' Count of 
Flanders, who died in 880. By him she had issue : 

8. Baldwin II., "le Chauvre/' Count of Flanders, 
Boulogne, and St. Pol. He died in 918. His wife was 
Alfritha, daughter of Alfred the Great, King of Eng- 
land, by whom he had issue : 

9. Arnould I., Count of Flanders, who died in 965. 
He married Alice, daughter of Herbert II., Count of 
Vermandois, fifth in descent from Charlemagne. They 
had issue : 

10. Baldwin III., "le Jeune," Count of Flanders, 
who died in 961. His wife was Maud, daughter of 
Conrad I., King of Germany, by whom he had issue : 

11. Arnould II., Count of Flanders, who died in 
988. He married Eosalie, daughter of Berenger II., 
King of Italy, by whom he had issue: 

12. Baldwin IV., "le Barbu,'' Count of Flanders, 
who died in 1036. He married Eleanor, daughter of 
Richard II. of Normandy, and by her had issue: 

13. Baldwin V., "de Lille," Count of Flanders, 
1067. His wife was Adela, daughter of Robert II., 
King of France, and granddaughter of Hugh Capet. 
By her he had issue : 

14. Matilda, who was married in 1053 to William, 
"the Conqueror," seventh Duke of Normandy, who was 
born in 1024, conquered England and became its King, 
1066, and died in 1087. Their fourth son was: 

15. Henry L, "Beauclerc," born at Selby, Yorkshire, 
1070, King of England from 1100 to 1135. His wife 
was Matilda, daughter of Malcolm Canmore, King of 
Scotland, by Margaret, sister and heir of Edgar Athel- 
ing, sole heiress of the Saxon throne. They had issue: 

16. Maud, sole heiress, who was born in 1104 and 
died 10 September, 1167. Her first husband was the 
Emperor Henry IV. of Germany, by whom she had no 
issue. At his death she married Geoffrey Plantagenet, 
son of Foulk V., Count of Anjou, by his wife Ermen- 




HfeifeMiif 



\^ 



BEATTY-ASFOEDBY 95 

gard, daughter and heiress of Helias, Count of Maine. 
By Geoffrey Plantagenet she had issue: 

17. Henry II., oldest son, born 1133, King of Eng- 
land, 1154 to 1189. He died in 1189. He married 
Eleanor, daughter and heiress of William V., Duke of 
Aquitaine and Count of Poictou, the divorced queen of 
Louis VII. of France. She died in 1202. They had 
issue : 

18. John, King of England from 1199 to 1216. He 
was the fifth son, born 24 December, 1160, and died 
1216. His first wife was Avisa, daughter and heiress 
of William, Earl of Gloucester, by whom he had no 
issue. His second wife was Isabella, daughter and 
heiress of Aymer Taillefer, Count of Angouleme, by 
Alice, daughter of Peter, Lord of Courtnay, fifth son 
of Louis le Gros, King of France. By her he had 
issue : 

19. Henry III., oldest son, born at Winchester 10 
October, 1206; King of England from 1216 to 1272; 
died 16 November, 1272. His wife was Eleanor, daugh- 
ter and co-heiress of Eaymond Berenger, Count of 
Provence and grandson of Alfonso, King of Arragon. 
She died 24 June, 1291. They had issue: 

20. Edward L, oldest son, born 1239, King of Eng- 
land from 1274 to 1298. His first wife was Eleanora, 
daughter of Ferdinand III., King of Castile, by whom 
he had issue. His second wife was Margaret, daughter 
of Philip the Hardy, King of France, son of St. Louis, 
by whom he had issue : 

21. Thomas Plantagenet de Brotherton, born in 
1301, died in 1338. He married twice, the second wife 
being Mary, daughter of William, Lord Eoos. By his 
first wife, Alice, daughter of Sir Eoger Halys of Har- 
wich, Knight, he had issue: 

22. Lady Margaret Plantagenet, Duchess of Nor- 
folk, first daughter and eventually sole heiress of her 
father. She died in 1399. Her second husband was 
Sir William Manny. By her first husband, John de 
Segrave, third Baron Segrave, she had issue : 



96 BEATTY-ASFOKDBY 

23. Elizabeth de Segrave, daughter and sole heiress 
of her father and mother. Arms: Sable, three garbs, 
argent, handed gules. Her husband was John de Mow- 
bray, fourth Baron Mowbray and Lord of the Isle of 
Axholme, born in 1326. He fell in conflict with the 
Turks at Constantinople in 1368. He was also a de- 
scendant of the Plantagenets, being the great-grandson 
of Edmund Plantagenet, Earl of Lancaster, by his sec- 
ond wife, Blanche, daughter of Eobert, Earl of Artois 
and son of Louis VIII., King of France. Edmund 
Plantagenet was the brother of Edward I., King of 
England, great-grandfather of Elizabeth de Segrave. 
By this marriage a double strain of Plantagenet blood 
was united. They had issue: 

24. Margaret de Mowbray, sometimes called Eleanor, 
who married John, Lord de Welles, fifth Baron. He 
served in the wars in Flanders, France, and Scotland, 
and fought with the Earl of Crawford on London 
Bridge. He was summoned to Parliament, 20 January, 
1376, to 26 February, 1421, in which year he died. Of 
this union there was issue : 

25. Eudo de Welles, son and heir, who died before 
his father. His wife was Maud, daughter of Ealph, 
Lord Greystock, fifth Baron Greystock. By her he had 
issue : 

26. Sir Lionel de Welles, sixth Baron. He served 
in the French wars; was Lieutenant of Ireland in the 
sixteenth year of Henry VI. ; was summoned to Parlia- 
ment from 1432 to 1460; and fell in the battle of 
Towton Field, Palm Sunday, 1461. He was twice mar- 
ried, his second wife being Margaret, sister and heir of 
Sir John Beauchamp of Bletshoe. By his first wife, 
Joan, only daughter of Sir Robert Waterton of Water- 
ton and Methley, County York, he had issue: 

27. Margaret de Welles, who married Sir Thomas 
Dymoke, Knight, of Scrivelsby, County Lincoln. They 
had issue: 

28. Sir Lionel Dymoke, Knight, second son. He 



BEATTY-ASFOEDBY 97 

was Sheriff of Lincolnshire in the seventh year of 
Henry VIII., and died 7 August, 1519. His wife was 
Joan, daughter and co-heiress of Richard Griffith of 
Seykford or Stockford, Esquire, and by her he had 
issue : 

29. Alice Dymoke, daughter and co-heiress. Arms: 
Sable, two lions passant argent, crowned or. She was 
the second wife of Sir William Skipwith, Knight of 
South Ormsby, Lincolnshire, High Sheriff of Lincoln- 
shire in 1527. They had issue: 

30. John Skipwith of Walmsgate, second son, who 
married Eleanor, daughter and heiress of John Kings- 
ton of Great Grimsby. They had issue: 

31. Mary Skipwith, who married John Newcomen 
of Saltfleetby. They had issue: 

32. Eleanor Newcomen, who was married to Wil- 
liam Asf ordby of Saltfleetby, and by him had issue : 

33. John Asf ordby, son and heir, who married 
Alice, daughter of William Wolley of Cumberworth, 
and had issue : 

34. William Asfordby of Stayne-in-the-Marsh, 
County Lincoln, England, and Kingston and Marble- 
town, Ulster County, New York, son and heir. His 
wife was Martha, daughter of William Burton of 
Burgh-in-the-Marsh. They had issue: 

35. Susanna Asfordby, eldest surviving daughter 
and co-heiress, who married John Beatty of Kingston 
and Marbletown, Ulster County, New York. 



DESCENDANTS OF JOHN BEATTY AND 



SUSANNA ASFORDBY 



FIRST GENERATION 

1. JoHN^ Beatty, founder of the distinguished 
Beatty Family of Ulster County, New York, was born 
in Ireland and was a descendant of the ancient landed 
and armigerous family of Beatty of that country, 
boasting descent from Prince Geoffrey of Scotland, an 
ally of Brian Boru, who participated in the battle of 
Clontarf, 1014 A.D. 

The exact date of the emigration of John Beatty to 
America is not known. The first mention of him in the 
Ulster County Records is 29 September, 1691, when he 
was returned, with five others, for Sheriff of Ulster 
County. The prominence of this office would argue that 
he had been a resident some time and had proved his 
worthiness of that trust. He was first resident of 
Esopus, now Kingston, and later moved to Marble- 
town, where he was a large land holder. On 9 June, 
1719, a tract of land containing seven hundred acres 
was confirmed to him and his heirs by the Trustees of 
Marbletown. 

He was Trustee of Marbletown for many years and 
was Deputy Surveyor of the Province of New York, 
in which capacity he surveyed and laid out the famous 
Manor of Livingston at the request of Robert Livings- 
ton, the first Patroon, this document being still in pos- 
session of the Livingston family. It was an impor- 
tant factor at the time of the notable Anti-rent agi- 
tation in New York State during the last century. 

John Beatty married 7 November, 1691, Susanna 
Asfordby, by whom he had ten children, all of whom 
are mentioned in his will. His death occurred in 
Ulster County, New York, between 26 April, 1720, and 
9 March, 1721, the respective dates of the making and 
proving of his will. Besides his children he mentions 

101 



102 BEATTY-ASFOEDBY 

also in his will his "trusty and well beloved wife, 
Susanna," and his "poor afflicted and distressed brother, 
Thomas Beatty, in Ireland," who had become blind, and 
their half sister who was takinsj care of him.* 

Susanna Asfordby, daughter and co-heiress of the 
Honorable William Asfordby of Stayne-in-the-Marsh, 
Lincolnshire, England, and Kingston and Marbletown, 
Ulster County, New York, the wife of the above John 
Beatty, was born probably in Ulster County, New York, 
soon after her parents emigrated to America. No rec- 
ord of her birth or baptism has been found, but as the 
English records end with the birth of three children to 
her parents in England, before their emigration, it is 
reasonable to infer that all the others were born in 
Kingston or Marbletown, Ulster County, where they 
settled. 

William Asfordby, the father of Susanna Asfordby, 
was a descendant of the royal line of Plantagenet, 
Kings of England, through his great-great-great-grand- 
mother, Alice Dymoke, as has been shown elsewhere in 
Part 1 of this volume. He brought with him from 
England a parchment containing twelve generations of 
his English ancestry, compiled by the then Herald of 
Arms, R. Chester. This ancient document passed 
from one generation of his descendants to another and 
is now in the possession of Mr. Leander Howard Crall 
of New York City, a descendant of Robert Beatty, the 
oldest child of John Beatty and Susanna Asfordby.f 

William Asfordby became a prominent man in the 
affairs of the young colony with whose destiny he had 
cast in his lot, his name appearing frequently upon the 
old Dutch records of Ulster County. He was a magis- 
trate for many years and held Court as Presiding 
Judge on many occasions. He was Sheriff of the Dis- 
trict of Esopus, and later of Ulster Count}^, when that 
County was erected, and was a member of the first 

•For copy of the wiH of John Beatty, see Section 1 of Appendix. 

tA facsimilie copy of this roost interesting document will be 
found in "The Ancestry of Leander Howard Crall," by Frank AUa- 
ben, opposite page 94. 



BEATTY-ASFORDBY 103 

New York Assembly. He had married in England, 
Martha, daughter of William Burton of Burgh-in-the- 
Marsh, Lincolnshire, England, and of their eight chil- 
dren Susanna was the oldest surviving and, with her 
two sisters, Eleanor and Catherine, inherited the estate 
of her father and mother; the only son of William 
Asfordby dying in infancy. The will of William As- 
fordby was made orally, before three friends, of whom 
John Beatty was one. His wife, Martha, was made 
sole heir and executrix. The will is recorded at Kings- 
ton, Ulster County, New York. 

Susanna Asfordby was a remarkable woman in 
many ways; the experiences of those early pioneer 
days developing in her the sterling qualities of her 
parentage. She was married 7 November, 1691, to 
John Beatty and survived him many years. Some time 
after his death she removed, with a portion of her fam- 
ily, to Prince George County, Maryland, settling in that 
portion of it now known as Frederick County. Here 
she made large purchases of land. On 17 July, 1732, 
she bought one thousand acres from Daniel Dulany, 
and in May of the year following she purchased from 
Captain John Stoddart nine hundred and thirty-nine 
acres of land situated on the west bank of the Mona- 
cacy River. 

She thus owned about two thousand acres in Fred- 
erick County and she and her sons at once acquired a 
prominent position among the largest landed proprie- 
tors and most eminent citizens of that county. The 
Land Records of Prince George County shows that dur- 
ing her lifetime Susanna Beatty transferred large farms 
to three of her sons, who had accompanied her South, 
William, Thomas and Edward, and she seems to have 
displayed an energy, combined with a degree of busi- 
ness and executive ability, rarely found in a woman. 
Her will was the first one recorded in Frederick County. 
It is dated 20 June, 1742, and was proved 30 October, 
1745,* her death occurring probably shortly before the 

•See Section 2 of Appendix for will of Susanna Asfordby. 



104 BEATTY-ASFORDBY 

latter date. She describes herself as "Susanna Beatty of 
Manocosey in Prince George County in the Province of 
Maryland/' and mentions all of her children but 
Charles and Henry. Charles is known to have died in 
Marbletown, Ulster County, New York, and it is prob- 
able that Henry was also dead prior to this date. Her 
oldest son, Eobert, also died before his mother, and she 
mentions this fact in bequeathing his portion to his 
children. The original Asfordby Parchment, men- 
tioned above, had been brought with her to Maryland 
and now descended to her second son, William; the 
oldest son, whose right of inheritance it w^as, being 
dead. 

Children : 
.2 i Egbert Beatty, oldest child, born in Marble- 
town about 1692-93. He was member of the 
Marbletown Infantry 1715-17; fence viewer 
1721 ; executor of his brother, Charles, 11 
March, 1727; freeholder 1728; died prior to 
1742, when his mother made her will and 
mentioned him as deceased. He married in 
1719 Bata, daughter of Joris Middagh of 
Heicop, Holland, and Brooklyn, New York, 
and of his wife, Marritje Martens Van Yssel- 
steyn. 

'3 ii William Beatty (see second generation). 

4 ill Charles Beatty, baptized 1698; died 1727. 

He married Janette, daughter of Thomas Jan- 
sen, by whom he had one child, Bata, both of 
whom he mentions in his will, made 20 March, 
1726, proved 11 March, 1727. Neither 
Charles nor his daughter are mentioned in his 
mother's will. 

5 iv Agnes Beatty, baptized 29 October, 1699; 

was living unmarried when her mother made 
her will in 1742. 
■6 V Jghn Beatty, baptized 2 March, 1701. He 
was a freeholder of Marbletown in 1728. Re- 
moved to Maryland, where his will was 



BEATTY-ASFORDBY 105 

proved in Cecil County 1 June, 1749. He 
^.-^"'""'*' mentions wife, Elizabeth, and "iDeloved chil- 
dren," but gives no names of the latter. 

7 vi Judge Thomas Beatty, baptized 14 March, 

1703; removed to Maryland, where he ac- 
quired considerable estate. He was Justice of 
Prince George County from 1739 to 1748; of 
Frederick County in 1748 and 1749, 1752 to 
1760, and was a member of the Maryland 
House of Burgesses 1757 and 1758. His will 
was made in February, 1768, and proved 8 
April, 1769. In it he mentions ■ wife, Mary, 
and children, Thomas, Charles, Susanna (wife 
of Nethan Maynard), James and Sarah, the 
last two being minors at the time. 

8 vii Edward Beatty, mentioned in wills of both 

his parents, was born in Ulster County, New 
York. Although no record of his baptism is 
found on the register of the old Dutch 
Church at Kingston, it is presumable that he 
was born there, as the family are known to 
have been continuous residents of that part till 
the father's death and the other children were 
all born there. He, too, removed to Maryland 
with his mother and acquired land there as 
early as 1730. His will was made 3 Feb- 
ruary and proved 18 of same month, 1755. 
He mentions wife, Susannah, and sons Eze- 
kiel, Ezra and Elijah, also an unborn child. 
His wife died the following August or Sep- 
tember, as her will, also on file at Frederick, 
was made 18 August and proved 9 September, 
1755. She also mentions sons Ezekiel, Ezra 
and Elijah, with Edward, evidently the post- 
humous child mentioned by her husband. In 
a deed executed in 1790 by Ezekiel and Elijah 
it is recorded that this child died soon after 
birth. 
9 viii Martha Beatty (see second generation) . 



106 BEATTY-ASFORDBY 

10 ix James Beatty, baptized 11 September, 1709, 

mentioned in wills of both parents. He re- 
moved to Maryland, where he died prior to his 
mother, although not prior to the date of her 
will. His own will, recorded at Annapolis, 
was proved 29 January, 1742-43, a few 
months before that of his mother. He evi- 
dently died unmarried, as he bequeaths all his 
property equally to his brothers and sisters 
and the children of his deceased brother, Rob- 
ert. 

11 X Henry Beatty, baptized 30 December, 1711. 

He is mentioned in will of his father 1721, 
but not in his mother's in 1742. He prob- 
ably died in the interval. No record of his 
marriage or evidence that he had any chil- 
dren has been found. 



SECOND GENEEATION 

3 William^ Beatty (John^), second child of John 
Beatty and Susanna Asfordby, was baptized at the old 
Dutch Church at Kingston, Xew York, 9 June, 1695.* 
He was a member of the Marbletown Infantry Militia 
and a freeholder of Marbletown in 1728. He is men- 
tioned in the wills of both his father and mother. 
Some years after John Beatty's death his widow re- 
moved to Prince George County, Maryland, settling in 
that part now known as Frederick County, with several 
of her children. William Beatty was one of these. 
Here he married Elizabeth Carmack, daughter of Cor- 
nelius Carmack of Frederick County. The will of 
Cornelius Carmack was made 13 May, 1746. "j* 

Elizabeth Carmack died 15 May, 1756, before her 
husband. He does not mention his wife in his will, 
which was dated 18 May, 1757, and proved 20 August, 
1757. He names as his heirs his son William and his 
three daughters, Eleanor, Mary and Anne.J 

In a statement made 1 July, 1856, by Eli Beatty of 
Hagerstown, Maryland, son of William Beatty, Junior 
(12), and grandson of William Beatty (3), he declares 
that his father, William Beatty, inherited the original 
homestead of Susanna Asfordby Beatty from his father, 
William Beatty, and states also that the tract of land 
so inherited contained two hundred and sixty-eight 
acres. 

Children : 

12 i Colonel William Beatty, only son and heir, 

born 17 January, 1739, became one of the 

chief men of .Frederick County. He was a 

magistrate and served in the Maryland Legis- 

*See Section 4 of Appendix. 

tSee Section 6 of Appendix. 

JSee Section 5 of Appendix for will of William Beatty. 

107 



108 BEATTY-ASFORDBY 

lature, also on various Revolutionary Com- 
mittees. He was Lieutenant-Colonel of the 
First Battalion of Fredericktown Militia and 
was also an officer of the Maryland Line dur- 
ing the American Revolution. He died 25 
April, 1801. 

13 ii Eleanor Beatty, married Jacob Young; 
mentioned in will of her father.* 

.14 iii Mary Beatty (see third generation). 

15 iv Ann Beatty, married Casper Shoaf or 
Schaaf, and is mentioned in the will of her 
father.f She died in 1757. 

.16 V Martha Beatty. 

9 Martha^ Beatty (John^), eighth child of John 
Beatty (1) and Susanna x^sfordby, was baptized 20 
April, 1707, at the old Dutch Church at Kingston, 
Ulster Count)^, New York. She married 24 November, 
1728, Johannes or John Middagh, born in Marbletown 
and baptized at Kingston 17 March, 1706.J He was 
the son of Joris Middagh, the son of Captain Aert 
Teunissen Middagh of Heicop, Holland, and Brook- 
lyn, New York.§ 

Child : 
17 i Mary Middagh (see third generation). 

•See Section 5 of Appendix. 

tSee Section 5 of Appendix. 

tSee Section 4 of Appendix. 

5Por a full account of the Middagh Family see "The Ancestry 
of Leander Howard Crall." 



THIRD GENERATION 

14 Mary^ Beatty (William^, John^), daughter 
and co-heiress of William Beatty (3) and Elizabeth 
Carmack. She was twice married, her first husband 
being Isaac Eltinge, as is recorded in a Petition in 
Chancery filed 29 February, 1772, in which is the fol- 
lowing clause : "The said Sarah widow of the said Ru- 
dolph Eltinge on or about the first day of August 1761 
intermarried with a certain Josias Clapham, and the 
said Mary Eltinge widow of Isaac Eltinge also on or 
about the twenty first day of May 1757 intermarried 
with a certain John Gary of Frederick County." Id 
her father's will, made 18 May, 1757, she is mentioned 
as Mary Cary, showing that she was already married to 
her second husband, John Cary, at that date, which is 
a little earlier than the one mentioned in the Petition 
in Chancery.* 

John Cary, the second husband of Mary Beatty, was 
a considerable landholder of Frederick County, Mary- 
land, as is shown by the land records at the Land Office 
at Annapolis, Md. ; the patents granted to him between 
the years 1752 and 1764 covering about eleven hundred 
acres of land.f His will is dated 23 November, 1773, 
and was probated in May, 1777. He makes his wife, 
Mary, his executrix and divides his estate" between her 
and their five surviving children, two having died in 
infancy, beside whom he expressed the desire to" be 
buried: J 

Children^ 
18 i John Dku Cary (see fourth generation). 

•A copy of this Petition, which is very lengthy, Is in:.the'^pos«w- 
6ion of Dr. Christopher Johnston ot Battimore," a great-grandion : 
of the Josias Clapham mentioned therein. 

tSee Section 7 of Appendix. 

tSee Section -8 of Appendix for certified copy of the will of John ■ 
Gary. 

109 



110 BEATTY-ASFORDBY 

19 ii William Gary (see fourth generation). 

20 iii Eleanor (Xelly) Gary, born 1762; men- 

tioned as deceased in her father's will in 1773. 

21 iv Elizabeth (Betsy) Gary, born 1764; co- 

heiress of her father; died unmarried. 

22 V Jacob Gary, born 1766; mentioned as de- 

ceased in his father's will in 1773. 

23 vi EoBERT Turner Gary, born 1768; co-heir of 

father; died unmarried. 

24 vii David Gary, born 1770; co-heir of father; 

died unmarried. 
17 Mary^ Middagh (Martha^ Beatty, John^), the 
daughter of Johannes Middagh by his wife, Martha 
Beatty (9), was born 7 May, 1732.* Her father was 
the son of Joris or George Middagh, the son of Gaptain 
Aert Teunissen Middagh of Heicop, Holland, who emi- 
grated to New Netherland in the early days of the new 
colony and became one of its leading citizens. The 
exact date of his emigration is not known, but Stiles, 
the Brooklyn historian, records the fact that he re- 
ceived a patent for one hundred acres of land 24 Octo- 
ber, 1654, at the Wallabout, Long Island, now a part of 
the city of Brooklyn, New York. The wife of Gaptain 
Aert Teunissen was Breckje Hansen Bergen, daughter 
of Hans Hansen Bergen and Sara de Eapelje. Hans 
Hansen Bergen was, as his name indicates, Hans son of 
Hans, of Bergen, Norway. He was the founder of the 
Bergen Family of Brooklyn, which still has many 
prominent representatives in that city and elsewhere. 
He emigrated to New Amsterdam at a very early 
period. His wife, Sara de Eapelje, is celebrated as be- 
ing the first female white child born in the colony of 
New Netherland. She was the daughter of Joris Jan- 
sen de Eapelje and Gatherine, daughter of Joris Trico 
of Paris, France, who were among the Walloons and 
French who, in 1623, helped to establish the first per- 
manent settlement in New Netherland. A most inter- 

•See Section 10 of Appendix. 



BEATTY-ASFORDBY 111 

esting account of these old pioneer families will be 
found in the monographs and appendices of "The An- 
cestry of Leander Howard Crall," by Frank Allaben, 
under the captions of Bergen, de Eapelje, Middagh, 
Beatty, etc., with full pedigrees showing the intermar- 
riages. To this work we have been indebted for much 
valuable information in compiling the early part of the 
present volume from data collected during years of re- 
search in Europe and America. 

The mother of John Middagh, husband of Martha 
Beatty and father of Mary Middagh, was Marritje 
Martens Van Ysselsteyn, daughter of Marten Cornelise 
Van Ysselsteyn of Ysselsteyn, Holland, who emigrated 
as early as 1660 and was one of the founders and origi- 
nal proprietors of Schenectady, New York. 

Captain Joris Middagh, the son of Captain Aert 
Teunissen Middagh, seems to have settled in the neigh- 
borhood of Kingston, the home of the Beatty family, 
two of his children marrying into that family. Bata 
Middagh married Robert Beatty (2), the oldest son of 
John Beatty (1) and Susanna Asfordby, and John Mid- 
dagh married Robert's youngest sister, Martha Beatty 
(9).* 

Mary Middagh married 2 August, 1751, William 
Ritchie, who emigrated from Scotland to America 
about 1742, the son of Robert Ritchie of Angus, Scot- 

land.f 
Children : 

25 i William Ritchie, Junior (see fourth gen- 

eration) . 

26 ii Martha Ritchie, born 5 August, 1755; mar- 

ried Henry McCleery; died 13 December, 
1813. 

27 iii John Ritchie, bom 20 July, 1757; married 

Catherine Beatty. 

28 iv Susan Ritchie, born 4 May, 1759. 

•For baptismal records of John Middagh and Martha Beatty and 
record of their marriage, see Section 4 of Appendix. 

tSee Section 10 of Appendix. 



113 BEATTY-ASFORDBY 

29 V Mary Ritchie, born 10 April, 1761 ; died 16 

May, 1816. 

30 vi Zarniah Ritchie, born 24 Angnst, 1763. 

31 vii Abner Ritchie, born 17 September, 1765; 

married Mary Jenkins. He is mentioned in 
letters of his nephew, William Ritchie, to his 
brother, Robert Ritchie.* 

♦See Section 11 of Appendix. 



FOURTH GENERATION 

18 Dr. John Dhu^ Gary (Mary^ Beatty, William^, 
John^), oldest son of John Gary and Mary Beatty (14), 
was born in July, 1758, at Fredericktown, Maryland. 
He was an officer in the American Revolution,* and his 
great-great-grandsons have in their possession (1907) 
two pistols captured by him from a British officer, and 
an old land patent issued to him for military service 
and signed by Thomas Jefferson. 

John Dhu Gary was not only a physician of promi- 
nence in his native county, but was also a man of high 
literary attainments, being noted as one of Maryland's 
poets. He owned and published in Frederick, during 
the years 1798-1800, a weekly newspaper which he 
named "The Key" in compliment to his friend, General 
John Ross Key. He represented his District in the 
Legislature several terms. He married in 1788 Alice 
Lee, daughter of Philip Richard Francis Lee and Elinor 
Lee of Charles Gounty, Maryland. Philip R. F. Lee 
fought in the colonial wars and had land granted to him 
for his services as an officer in Maryland. He died in 
1778.t 

Children : 

32 i George Gary (see fifth generation). 

33 ii James Gary, born 3 March, 1792, near Port 

Tobacco, Gharles Gounty, Maryland. He died 
unmarried. 

19 William^ Gary, Senior (Mary^ Beatty, Wil- 

•"It is shown by the official records that one John D. Gary served 
as a lieutenant in the 1st Maryland Regiment, Revolutionary War. 
His name appears only on a list dated Register's Office, August 7, 
1783, which indicates that a payment, by draft, was made to him 
on Decemver 26, 1782." 

Signed, "F. C. Ainsvi^orth^ Adjutant-General, 

"September 13, 1907." 

tSee Section 9 of Appendix. 

113 



114 BEATTY-ASFOEDBY 

iiam^, John^), second son of John Gary and Mary 
Beatty (14), was born 19 June, 1760, at Frederick- 
town, Maryland.* At the age of eighteen he enlisted in 
the 7th Eegiment Maryland Line, 21 May, 1778, and 
served as a private till 16 August, 1780, being in Cap- 
tain William Beatty's (12) Company. f He died in 
Montgomery County, Maryland, 12 October, 1806, at 
the age of forty-six.f On June 2, 1793, he was mar- 
ried to Maria Barbara Fritchie,§ daughter of Dr. Cas- 
per Fritchie and Susan Whitehare. She was born 20 
June, 1773, at Hagerstown, Maryland,^ and was said to 
have been exceptionally beautiful. She was educated 
at the best schools for girls that the country afforded at 
that time. Her children were all well educated and her 
sons became prominent in their professions. By the 
second marriage of her father. Dr. Fritchie, she had 
one half-sister, Mrs. Catherine Thomas of Frederick, 
Maryland, and one half-brother, John Fritchie, of the 
same city. John Fritchie married but died without 
issue, leaving considerable wealth, which, after the 
death of his widow, was, by the conditions of his will, 
transferred to his two sisters, Mrs. Thomas and Mrs. 
Gary. His widow is the subject of Whittier's well- 
known poem, "Barbara Fritchie." 

Maria Barbara Fritchie survived her husband, Wil- 
liam Gary, Senior, and married again 16 May, 1808, 
Robert Eitchie (42) of Fredericktown, Maryland, son 
of William Ritchie, Junior (26), and his wife, Frances 
Oilman.** She survived Eobcrt Eitchie, also, and died 
23 May, 1834, at Fort Ball, near Tiffin, Ohio.ft 

Children : 
34 i Cyrus Gary, born 13 October, 1794, at 

•See Section 13 of Appendix, Record 1. 

tMaryland Archives, Vol. 18, pp. 189, 197. 

tSee Section 13 of Appendix, Record 1. 

§Renord of Marriage Licenses, Office of Clerk of Circuit Court 
of Frederick County, Maryland. See also Section 15 of Appendix, 

^See Section 13 of Appendix, Record 1. 

••See Section 10 of Appendix. 

ttSee Section 13 of Appendix, Record 1. 



BEATTY-ASFOEDBY 115 

Georgetown, D. C. While he was at college, 
Baltimore was threatened by the English 
fleet, and Cyrus Gary, with some fellow- 
students, volunteered his services and was in 
Fort McHenry at the time of its bombard- 
ment. After a thorough college education he 
studied law and began the practice of his 
profession in Staunton, Ya., in partnership 
with Judge Briscoe G. Baldwin. Later he 
removed to Lewisburg, Ya., now West Yir- 
ginia, where, in 1820, he married Mary Sidles 
Arbuckle, by whom he had one daughter, 
Eliza Green Gary, who died in infancy, and 
two sons. Gyrus Eobert Gary, born 20 Feb- 
ruary, 1829, died unmarried, and Gharles 
William Gary, born 20 September, 1826, who 
graduated at the Yirginia Military Institute, 
and later, in medicine, at the University of 
Yirginia. He died unmarried. This line is 
now extinct. Gyrus Gary was a man of high 
legal attainment and great eloquence and was 
one of the most prominent men of his day in 
Yirginia. He was a member of the Legis- 
lature of Yirginia from Greenbrier Gounty 
during the session of 1829-30,* and at the 
time of his death was a candidate for Con- 
gress. He died 1 April, 1832, at Lewisburg, 
Ya., in his thirty-eighth year. 

35 ii Elizabeth (Eliza) Gary (see fifth genera- 

tion). 

36 iii William Gary, Junior (see fifth genera- 

tion). 

37 iv Robert Caspar Jefferson Gary (see fifth 

generation) . 

38 v John Middagh Beatty CxIry, born 19 April, 

1803. at Georgetown, D. G. ; died unmarried at 
Tiffin, Ohio, 28 January, 1872. 
29 vi Eleanor Susan Gary, born 27 July, 1805, at 

•Attendance Books, State Library, Virginia, Vol. 44. 



116 BEATTY-ASFORDBY 

Georgetown, D. C. She was educated at Miss 
Marcella's Seminary at Frederick, Md., and 
was among those who took part in the recep- 
tion given in that city to General Lafayette 
and brilliantly described the occasion in a let- 
ter written at that time. She married Gen- 
eral Henry Colgate Brish in Frederick, Md., 
7 December, 1824, Bishop Johns of the 
Protestant Episcopal Church performing the 
ceremony. After some years residence in 
Frederick they removed to Fort Ball, Ohio, 
where General Brish became a distinguished 
citizen. They made the whole distance from 
Frederick to Tiffin in a covered carriage, the 
first one brought to Seneca County, landing in 
Tiffin on July 6, 1828, a Sunday afternoon. 
They took with them also Mrs. Brish's piano, 
likewise the first to be seen in Seneca County. 
It was constructed in London, England, at an 
early date, and is now in the possession of the 
^ Tiffin Historical Society. Among the most 
important trusts confided to General Brish 
after his settling in Ohio was the manage- 
ment of the affairs of the Seneca Indians and 
his appointment by the Government to escort 
them from Ohio to their new Eeservation 
West of the Mississippi River in the year 1831 ; 
for which service he received a large grant of 
land near Tiffin, upon which handsome estate 
he lived in affluence until his death in the late 
fifties, his widow continuing her residence 
there until her death, 14 March, 1885. They 
had no children. The following is taken from 
a History of Seneca County. "General Henry 
Colgate Brish was twice elected member of 
the Ohio Legislature — was Common Pleas 
Judge two terms — was gov. agent who re- 
moved the different tribes of Indians from 
Northern Ohio to their new reservations far- 



BEATTY-ASFOEDBY 117 

ther West,* and served in many minor posi- 
tions of trust and honor the people of Tiffin 
and Seneca County." 
Maria Barbara Fritchie (Gary) had two children by 
her second husband, Robert Ritchie, viz. : Frances 
Maria Ritchie (see sixth generation), and George Gil- 
man Ritchie, who was born 13 January, 1867,t and 
died unmarried at Tiffin, Ohio. 

25 William^ Ritchie, Junior (Mary^ Middagh, 
Martha^ Beatty, John^), oldest son of William Ritchie, 
the Emigrant, and Mary Middagh (17), was born 27 
March, 1753, and married Frances Gilman. He died 
18 September, 1814.J 
Children : 

40 i William Ritchie, living in Annapolis, Mary- 

land, in 1805. 

41 ii Robert Ritchie (see fifth generation). 
These two sons of William Ritchie, Junior, and Fran- 
ces Gilman are the only children of whom we have any 
record. The letters of William, the second junior of 
that name, to his brother Robert (see Section 11 of 
Appendix), speak of the latter as "only brother." A 
postscript to one of the letters mentions "Mama and 
Mariah," who might be a sister, but there is not suffi- 

•"It Is a settlement of the Wyandot Indians who inhabit this 
place. Among the company at breakfast was a mild old gentle- 
man, who had been for many years employed by the United States 
government in conducting negotiations with the Indians, and who 
had just concluded a treaty with these people by which they bound 
themselves, in consideration of a certain annual sum, to remove 
next year to some land provided for them, west of the Mississippi, 
and a little way beyond St. Louis. He gave me a moving account 
of their strong attachment to the familiar scenes of their infancy, 
and in particular to the burial places of their kindred, and of their 
great reluctance to leave them. He had witnessed many such re- 
movals, and always with pain, though he knew that they departed 
for their own good. The question whether this tribe should go or 
stay had been discussed among them a day or two before, in a hut 
erected for the purpose, the logs of which still lay upon the ground 
before the inn. "When the speaking was done, the ayes and noes 
were ranged on opposite sides, and every male adult voted in his 
turn. The moment the result was known, the minority (a large 
one) cheerfully yielded to the rest, and withdrew all kind of oppo- 
sition." — Charles Dickens in "American Notes." 

tSee Section 13 of Appendix, Record 1. 

tSee Ritchie Family Bible record. Section 10 of Appendix. 



118 BEATTY-ASFORDBY 

cient proof of this to include her in the above list of 
children. The mention of "Uncle Abner" identifies 
this "William Ritchie, Junior/' as the son of Abner 
Ritchie's brother, William, the first Junior. (Compare 
the Ritchie Family Bible record in Section 10 of Ap- 
pendix.) 



FIFTH GENERATION 

32 George^ Gary (John Dhu,* Mary^ Beatty, Wil- 
liam,2 John^), oldest son of Dr. John Dhu Gary (18) 
and Alice Lee, was born 7 August, 1789, near "Allen's 
Fresh," Gharles County, Maryland. After a classical 
education he studied law with Ghief Justice Taney in 
Frederick, Maryland, and later he settled in Georgia. 
He was a member from Georgia of the eighteenth Con- 
gress and was often heard in debate with the master 
statesmen of that period, being a ripe, classical scholar 
and a fluent speaker. In the annals of Congress for 
1823 are recorded two of his speeches; one an answer to 
the speech of Daniel Webster on the Grecian Cause, the 
other an answer to Buchanan's advocacy of the erection 
of a monument to George Washington. Both will attest 
his eloquence and erudition. He was a political favorite, 
his friends deeming no position of honor beyond his 
attainment, and he was once named as a probable can- 
didate for the Presidency of the United States, his 
chances being weighed against those of his friend, Wil- 
liam A. Crawford of Georgia. But his political aspira- 
tions were blighted by premature decline in health; his 
last days being spent in literary retirement and the edit- 
ing of a journal, "The Hickory Nut." He died at 
Thomaston, Georgia, 10 September, 1843. 

George Gary married 1 January, 1818, Ann Fowke of 
Maryland, whose line of descent runs back to William 
Fowke, born 1403, died 1438, known as William Fowke 
of Brewood, Staffordshire, England. It is said of Ann 
Fowke Gary that in her girlhood she was the society 
favorite of Washington, "having the advantage of 
wealth and the graces of the accomplished." She died 

119 



120 BEATTY-ASFORDBY 

6 June, 1820, and was buried in the Crawford burial 
ground, Columbia County, Georgia. 
Children : 

42 i John James Cary (see sixth generation). 

35 Elizabeth^ (Eliza) Cary (William,^ Mary^ 
Beatty, Williani,^ John^), second child of William Gary, 
Senior (17), and Maria Barbara Fritchie, was born 17 
August, 1796, at Georgetown, D. C* Her first hus- 
band was Lewis Green, a banker of Frederick, Mary- 
land. He came of the distinguished family of that 
name of Annapolis, Maryland. They were married 14 
March, 1815, and he died 1 February, 1826, at Freder- 
ick. She then moved with her three children to San- 
dusky, Ohio, where, 26 May, 1830, she was married for 
the second time to Piatt Brush, a lawyer. He died 17 
August, 1840. Elizabeth Cary survived her second hus- 
band for many years; she died 23 September, 1864.f 

Children : 

43 i Frederick William Green (see sixth genera- 

tion). 

44 ii Matilda Green (see sixth generation). 

45 ill Lewis Edward Green, born 21 December, 

1821, died 8 March, 1850, at Cold Spring, 

California. J 
^6 iv Eliza Cary Brush, bom 30 April, 1832, died 

29 November, 1833. 
47 V Mary Perlee Brush, born 1 November, 1834, 

died 21 March, 1851. 

36 William^ Cary, Junior (William,^ Mary^ 
Beatty, William,^ John^), third child of William Cary, 
Senior (19), and Maria Barbara Fritchie, was born at 
GeorgetowTi, D. C, 23 July, 1798. § After a college 
education he studied law and in 1820 removed from 
Frederick, Maryland, to Lewisburg, Virginia, where he 
practiced his profession for some years. He served in 

•See Section 13 of Appendix, Record 1. 

tFor dates In connection with Elizabeth Gary, see Section 13 of 
Appendix, Records 1 and 2. 

tFor the record of the births and deaths of the children of 
Elizabeth Cary Green Brush, see Section 13 of Appendix, Record 2. 

jSee Section 13 of Appendix, Record 1. 



BEATTY-ASFORDBY 121 

the Legislature of Virginia from Greenbrier County 
during the session of 1833-34,* and was the last Mar- 
shal of the Greenbrier District Court of Chancery. At 
the time of his death, I April, 1857, he was, and had 
been for many years, Commissioner in Chancery and 
the presiding Judge of the County and had held office 
in the Court of Appeals in Lewisburg from the time 
of its organization until his death, when the Court con- 
ferred the same office upon his only surviving son, 
James Hervey Otey Cary, who held the position until 
the Confederate War closed the sessions of the Court. 
William Cary, Junior, was married 2 April, 1828, to 
Ophelia Mathews, born December 8, 1811, died March 
11, 1866, eldest daughter of John Mathews of Green- 
brier County, Va., and Catherine Pope, also of Vir- 
ginia. John Mathews, born 30 October, 1768, died 
November 10, 1849, was the son of William Mathews 
(born 1742, died November, 1772) and his wife, Fran- 
ces Crowe. William Mathews was the son of Captain 
John Mathews (of lineal descent from Lord David, 
founder of the Welsh clan of Mathews), who settled in 
Augusta County, Virginia, 1737. His wife was Anne 
Archer, daughter of Lieutenant Sampson Archer, of 
Virginia. Captain John Mathews served in the Colo- 
nial wars, as did also Lieutenant Archer.f The will of 
William Cary, Junior, is on file at the Office of the 
Register of Wills for Frederick County.J 

Children : 
48 i John Mathews Cary, born 19 July, 1829; 
after graduating with high honors at the age 
of nineteen from the Virginia Military Insti- 
tute, was engaged in Civil Engineering until 
failing health forced him to resign this call- 
ing. He died 5 May, 1853. 

•Attendance Books, State Library, Virginia, Vol. 49. % 

tSee references to the Mathews Family in Hening's Statutes at "\ 

Large ; Waddell's Annals of Augusta County, Virginia ; Wither's 5 

Border W^arfare : Appleton's Cyclopedia ; Peyton's History of Au- 
gusta County ; Howe's History of Virginia ; and Bishop Mead's Old 
Families and Churches, 

$See Section 16 of Appendix, 



122 BEATTY-ASFORDBY 

49 ii Maria Catherine Gary, born 7 June, 1831; 

died unmarried in 1849. 

50 iii William Robert Gary, born 24 December, 

1833 ; died 8 May, 1835. 

51 iv James Hervey Otey Gary, third son, born 5 

May, 1836, bore the full name of his kinsman, 
James Hervey Otey, the first Bishop of the 
Episcopal Ghurch of Tennessee and founder of 
Suwanee University. He was appointed in 
1857, by the Supreme Court of Virginia, Mar- 
shal of that Court at Lewisburg, succeeding 
his father in that office and holding it till the 
Civil War closed the sessions of the Court. 
To his mother and sisters he was the soul of 
filial devotion — of the highest type of the Vir- 
ginian gentleman — a man of the most sterling 
qualities. His death occurred suddenly in 
Staunton, Virginia, 15 November, 1895, and 
he lies buried in the Old Stone Church in 
Lewisburg, West Virginia. 

52 v Eliza Eleanor Gary, born 2 May, 1838; died 

unmarried November, 1855. 

53 vi Henrietta Harrison Gary, born 5 January, 

1841. She was married in Lewisburg 1 June, 
1869, to Adam Clark Snyder, son of John and 
Elizabeth Snyder. He was born in Crab-Bot- 
tom, Highland County, Va., 26 March, 1834, 
and was educated at Washington College (af- 
terwards Washington and Lee University) and 
at the University of Virginia. He served 
through the entire Civil War in the Confed- 
erate army. He began the practice of law at 
Lewisburg, West Virginia, and soon had a 
large and lucrative clientele. On the death of 
Judge Patton he was appointed to the Su- 
preme Bench of the State, and elected to a 
full term at the next election. During a por- 
tion of his incumbency he was President of 
the Court. He is regarded as the ablest of 



BEATTY-ASFOEDBY 123 

the Judges who have adorned that Bench. He 
was especially successful in the elucidation of 
the land laws, and paved the way for settling 
land litigation in that State. He died 24 
July, 1896. Of the nine children of Judge 
Snyder and his wife, Henrietta Gary, four 
died in infancy; four still surviving, 1908. 
Children : 

i Dr. Harry Otey Snyder, born 5 Febru- 
ary, 1873, died 21 August, 1903. 
ii Verne Snyder, born 7 January, 1876; 

now living, 1908. 
iii Kenton Mathews Snyder, born 2 Jan- 
uary, 1878; now living, 1908. 
iv Frederick William Snyder, born 29 

February, 1880; now living, 1908. 
V ZuLiEME Austin Snyder, born 6 March, 
1881; now living, 1908. 

54 vii Louisa Madden Gary (see sixth generation). 

55 viii Sallie Mathews Gary (see sixth genera- 

tion). 

56 ix Willie Anne Gary (see sixth generation). 

37 Eobert Gasper Jefferson^ Gary (William,'^ 
Mary^ Beatty, William,^ John^), third son of William 
Gar}', Senior (9), and Maria Barbara Fritchie, was 
born 22 November, 1800, in Georgetown, D. G.* He 
studied medicine at Jefferson Medical University, Phil- 
adelphia, where he graduated with distinction, after- 
wards taking up the practice of his profession at Lew- 
isburg. West Virginia. Here, in 1824, he married 
Frances Growe Mathews, daughter of John Mathews, 
and the sister of Ophelia, the wife of his older brother, 
William Gary, Junior (37). f The following year they 
removed to Tiffin, Ohio, about which time their only 
child, Eoberta, was born. In 1837 Eobert Gasper Jef- 
ferson Gary died at Fort Ball, near TiffinJ and the next 

♦Section 13 of Appendix, Record 1. 

tSee reference to Mattiews Family in biographical note of William 
Gary, Junior, elsewhere in this Volume. 

tSee Section 13 of Appendix, Record 1. 



124 BEATTY-ASFORDBY 

year, 20 October, 1838, his wife died also, in Lewisburg, 
Va., leaving the little Roberta orphaned. 

Children : 
67 i Roberta Gary (see sixth generation). 

41 Robert^ Ritchie (William,^ Mary^ Middagh, 
Martha^ Beatty, John^), son of William Ritchie, Junior 
(25), and Frances Gilman, was born 14 March, 1784, 
in Fredericktown, Maryland.* In 1805 he was Assist- 
ant Military Agent for the State of Maryland and in 
1809 was appointed Notary Public for that State.f Iii 
1820 he became the owner of the ^^Republican Gazette," 
a paper published in Frederick, which he continued to 
edit till his death in that city, 22 September, 1824.J 
He had married 16 May, 1808, Maria Barbara Fritchie, 
the daughter of Dr. Casper Fritchie of Frederick, and 
the widow of William Gary, Senior (20), of that city. 
She survived Robert Ritchie also for some years and 
died at Fort Ball, near Tiffin, Ohio, 23 May, 1834.§ 

Children : 

58 i Frances Maria Ritchie (see sixth genera- 

tion) . 

59 ii George Oilman Ritchie, born 13 January, 

1817, in Frederick, Maryland; died unmarried 
in Tiffin, Ohio. 

•See Bible Record No. 1, Section 13 of Appendix. 

tSee Section 12 of the Appendix. 

tFor the record of the death of Robert Ritchie, see Record 1, 
Section 13 of the Appendix. 

SSes Section 13 of Appendix, Record 1. 



SIXTH GENEEATION 

42 John James^ Gary (George,^ John Dhu,* 
Mary^ Beatty, William,^ John^), only child of George 
Gary (32) and Ann Fowke, was born 4 December, 1818, 
at Columbia, Georgia. After preparation at the best 
classical schools he entered the college at Athens, Geor- 
gia, where he graduated with distinction and began the 
study of law under Judge Lumpkin of the Supreme 
Court of Georgia at Athens. With his brilliant attain- 
ments he soon became a leading member of the Bar. 
While quite a young man he was nominated for Con- 
gress and was defeated only by a small majority. He 
removed from Georgia to Texas in 1855. Here he was 
District Attorney for the Sixth Judicial District, In- 
spector of Schools, and held other positions of honor 
until his death in 1873 at Henderson, Texas. In 1840 
he had married Frances Flewellen of Thomaston, Geor- 
gia, a cousin of Dr. E. A. Flewellen, chief surgeon in 
General Hood's Brigade, C. S. A., and State Senator 
of Georgia, 1896. She was also a cousin of General 
James P. Drake of the First Regiment Indiana Volun- 
teers, Mexican War, and was nearly related to the Carrs 
and Persons ; all of the oldest Georgia and North Caro- 
lina families. 

Children : 

60 i Ada Cart, married Norman C. Ogilvie. 

Child : 
i Norman C. Ogilvie, Junior. 

61 ii Mary E. Gary, married John Hickey. 

Child : 
i Ross Gary Hickey. 

62 iii Alice Gary, married James W. Shelton. 

Children : 

125 



126 BEATTY-ASFOEDBY 

i Fannie Shelton, married Julius Cash- 

ary. 
ii Mary Flewellen Shelton, married J. 
K. Landers. 
Children : 
i Douglas Landers. 
ii Flossie Landers. 
iii Malcolm Landers. 

43 Frederick William^ Green (Elizabeth^ Cary, 
William,^ Mary^ Beatty, William,2 Johni), oldest child 
of Elizabeth Gary (35) by her first husband, Lewis 
Green, was born in Frederick, Maryland, 18 February, 
1816,* and later removed to Tiffin, Ohio, where he set- 
tled, in 1833. He was elected by the Democratic Party 
as Auditor of Seneca Countv, which office he held six 
years. In 1851 he represented the Seneca District in 
Congress, and was re-elected in 1853. His services in 
this body were distinguished, and at this time there 
began a strong attachment between himself and Stephen 
A. Douglas, which lasted until the latter's death. As 
member of Congress he established, in 1855, the L^nited 
States Courts for the Northern District of Ohio at 
Cleveland, and was Clerk of those Courts from 1855 to 
1866. In 1866 he became Associate Editor of the 
Cleveland "Plain Dealer," and so continued until ill 
health required his retirement in 1874. In 1876 he was 
Secretary of the Ohio Centennial Commission at Phila- 
delphia, and in 1878 was appointed by the Governor of 
Ohio as State Inspector of Oils. He died in Cleveland, 
Ohio, in 1879. 

In 1845 Frederick W. Green was married to Catherine 
Elizabeth Dressback of Circleville, Ohio, daughter of 
Dr. Dressback. 

Children : 
63 i Alice Gary Green, married Joseph Hodges 
Mason; died in 1881. 
Child : 
i Kate Juliette Mason, Cleveland, Ohio 

•Section 13 of Appendix, Record 2. 



BEATTY-ASFOEDBY 127 

64 ii Charles Dressback Green, died in infancy. 

65 iii Lewis Edward Green, married Nellie Van 

Camp, of Cleveland, Ohio; now (1908) a resi- 
dent of Brooklyn, ISTew York. 

66 iv Frederick William Green, Junior, died in 

Cleveland, 1903. 

67 V Harry Ely Green, married, in 1887, to Nan- 

nie M. McKinnie, of Cleveland; died in 1900 
Child : 

i William McKinnie Green, born 10 
June, 1889; now (1908) taking the Sci- 
entific Course at Yale College, New 
Haven. 

44 Matilda^ Green (Elizabeth^ Cary, William,^ 
Mary^ Beatty, William,^ John^), second child of Eliza- 
beth (Eliza) Cary (35) by her first husband, Lewis 
Green, was born 13 October, 1818. She married Dr. 
Stark, who was an educator of ability. He taught in the 
Fremont, Ohio, schools and was ably assisted by his 
wife. Later he took an active part in politics and was 
very popular, holding some of the highest offices in the 
gift of the people of Sandusky County. Matilda Green 
died 19 August, 1853. 

Children : 

68 i Eliza Stark, married Mr. Galagher, Cleve- 

land, Ohio. 

69 ii Mary Stark, married Mr. Francisco, Cleve- 

land, Ohio. 

70 iii Lewis Stark. 

71 iv Harriet Stark. 

72 v Maria V. Stark, married Mr. Miner ; died 10 

July, 1903, at Clyde, Ohio. 
Children : 
i Lewis Miner, born in 1880. 
ii Helen Miner, born in 1883. 

54 Louisa Madden^ Cary (William,^ William,^ 
Mary^ Beatty, William,^ John^), seventh child of Wil- 
liam Cary, Junior (36), and Ophelia Mathews, was 
born 8 April, 1844. She was married in Lewisburg, 



128 BEATTY-ASFORDBY 

Va., 14 October, 1868, to Thomas Lewis Feamster, a 
native of Greenbrier County, West Virginia, and a 
prominent farmer. As a Confederate soldier and lieu- 
tenant in the Greenbrier Cavalry, his record was par- 
ticularly brilliant and daring, and he was desperately 
wounded in the Gettysburg Campaign. During the ad- 
ministrations of President Cleveland he served as Post- 
master of Lewisburg, with credit to himself and satis- 
faction to the community. He belonged to one of the 
oldest families of his State and his kindred have filled 
many responsible offices in the County and State. He 
died 31 December, 1906. 
Children : 

73 i Daisy Patton Feamster, born 4 July, 1869. 

74 ii William Gary Feamster, born 26 November, 

1871. 

75 iii EoYDEN Keith Feamster, born 29 July, 

1873. 

76 iv Claude Newman Feamster, born 23 April, 

1876. 

77 V Thomas Paul Feamster, born 14 October, 

1878; died 2 June, 1879. 

78 vi Otey Turk Feamster, born 7 April, 1880. 

79 vii Ophelia Mathews Feamster, born 23 July, 

1882. 

80 viii Zoe Louise Feamster, born 26 December, 

1884. 

81 ix Lewis Alderson Feamster, born 1 May, 

1887; died 14 April, 1900. 

55 Sallie Mathews^ Gary (William,^ William,* 
Mary3 Beatty, William,^ John^), eighth child of Wil- 
liam Gary, Junior (36), and Ophelia Mathews, was 
born 24 April, 1846. She was married at Lewisburg, 
West Virginia, 28 December, 1870, to Flavins Jo- 
sephus Snyder, the brother and law partner of her sis- 
ter's husband, Judge Adam Clark Snyder. He was 
born 24 October, 1841, and was a native of Highland 
County, Virginia. He served during the Civil War as 
a member of the Thirty-first Virginia Infantry, C. S. 



83 


• • 

11 


84 


iii 


85 


iv 


86 


V 


87 


vi 



BEATTY-ASJFOEDBY 129 

A. After the war he took the degree of A. B. at Wash- 
ington and Lee University, Lexington, Va., and of B. 
L. at the University of Virginia. He was a lawyer of 
marked ability, possessing an acute and discriminating 
mind, and enjoyed a large practice both in Pocahontas 
and Greenbrier Counties, West Virginia. He died at 
Lewisburg 7 September, 1895. 

Children : 
82 i KiRKE Snyder, born 21 May, 1876; died 26 

April, 1901. 

Otey Louise Snyder, born 7 April, 1878. 

Adam Cary Snyder, born 17 May, 1881. 

Henrietta Elizabeth Snyder, born 17 May, 

1885. 

William Holt Snyder, born 7 July, 1887. 

Robert Lee Snyder, born 12 October, 1889. 

56 Willie Anne^ Cary (William ,5 William,^ 
Mary^ Beatty, William,^ John^), youngest child of Wil- 
liam Cary, Junior (36), and Ophelia Mathews. After 
graduating at the Convent of the Visitation at Freder- 
ick, Maryland, she was married at Lewisburg, West Vir- 
ginia, to Rudolph Samuel Turk, who was born in Au- 
gusta County, Virginia, 6 December, 1849. He was 
educated at private schools; particularly at one estab- 
lished at Mossy Creek, Virginia, by his father, the late 
Colonel Rudolph Turk. He entered Roanoke College, 
and later studied law at the University of Virginia. At 
the time of their marriage he was a practicing lawyer 
in Pocahontas Count}^, West Virginia, and was Prose- 
cuting Attorney for that County, a position he held for 
eight years. In 1888 he removed with his wife to 
Wichita, Kansas, and formed a law partnership with 
William K. Carlisle, son of the Hon. John G. Carlisle 
of Kentucky. The death of Colonel Rudolph Turk 
caused them to return to Virginia. They then located 
in Staunton in 1890 and have since resided there. Mr. 
Turk follows his profession as lawyer and incidentally 
edits the "Staunton Spectator,'^ a newspaper of which 
he is the owner. He has filled a number of appointive 



130 BEATTY-ASFORDBY 

positions under the Governors of Virginia. One of his 
brothers, J. Alexander Turk, died at Richmond, Va., 1 
January, 1889; another brother, the late William A. 
Turk, so distinguished as the Passenger Traffic Man- 
ager of the Southern Railway, died at Washington, D. 
C, 9 April, 1904, leaving Mr. Turk the sole survivor of 
his family.* Mr. and Mrs. Turk have no children. 

Mrs. Turk is a member of the Colonial Dames of Vir- 
ginia, based upon the colonial services of her lineal an- 
cestors. Captain John Mathews and Lieutenant Samp- 
son Archer of Augusta County, Virginia. f She is a 
member of the Maryland Line Chapter of the Daugh- 
ters of the American Revolution, through the services of 
her grandfather, William Cary, Senior, in the 7th Regi- 
ment Maryland Line, Revolutionary War.t She is also 
a member of the Society of Americans of Royal De- 
scent, through her ancestor, William Asfordby of 
Stayne-in-the-Marsh, Lincolnshire, England, and Kings- 
ton and Marbletown, Ulster County, New York, the 
father of Susanna Asfordby, wife of John Beatty. Wil- 
liam Asfordby was a descendant of the Plantagenet 
Royal Line of England as elsewhere shown in Part 1 

of this volume.§ 

57 Roberta^ Cary (Robert C. J.,^ William,^ Mary^ 
Beatty, William,^ John^), only child of Robert Casper 
Jefferson Cary (37) of Lewisburg, West A-^irginia, and 
Tiffin, Ohio, and of his wife, Frances Crowe Mathews, 
was born about 1835 and was early left an orphan, both 
parents d3dng before she was three years old (see 38). 
She was educated at the Academy, Lewisburg, Va. ; the 
Locust Lane School, Adams County, Miss. ; Mrs. B. H. 
Minor's School, Richmond, Va. ; and Miss English's 
School, Georgetown, D. C. Her first husband, whom 

•Men of Mark in Virginia, Vol. 2, p. 369. 

tWaddeU's Annals of Augusta County, p. 309 ; Hening's Statutes 
at Large, VII, pp. 183, 195. 

JMaryland Archives, Vol. 18, p. 197. 

§See also "The Ancestry of Leander Howard Crall," by Frank 
Allaben, New York, 1908 ; Pedigrees of Plantagenet. Skipwlth, 
Newcomen, Asfordby, Beatty. 



BEATTY-ASFOEDBY 131 

she married in September, 1856, was Richard Corbin of 
Moss Neck, Caroline County, Va., who was killed in the 
Confederate service at Culpeper, 1863. He is men- 
tioned in the University of Virginia "Memorial," in 
Dabney's Life of General T. J. Jackson, in Colonel 
Henderson's Life of Stonewall Jackson and other his- 
torical works. He was the son of James Parke Corbin, 
Esquire. Some years after his death Roberta Cary mar- 
ried for the second time in September, 1870, Rev. Ovid 
A. Kinsolving, D. D., of the Episcopal Church, Middle- 
burg, Loudoun County, Va. She was his third wife. 
By his first wife Dr. Kinsolving was the father of Mr. 
Charles Kinsolving of Washington, D. C, and of 
Bishop George Herbert Kinsolving of Texas, and by his 
second wife Dr. Kinsolving was the father of Bishop 
Lucien Lee Kinsolving of Brazil and Rev. Arthur 
Barksdale Kinsolving, formerly Rector of Christ 
Church, Brooklyn, N. Y., and now of St. Paul's Church, 
Baltimore, Maryland. 

Children : 

88 i Jane Willford Corbin, born 16 August, 

1857 ; she is historically mentioned with her 
father in the above named books. She died 
young. 

89 ii Roberta Cary Kinsolving, born 10 March, 

1874; died aged nine years. 

90 iii Rev. Wythe Leigh Kinsolving, born 14 No- 

vember, 1877. He was educated at the Epis- 
copal High School and Theological Seminary, 
Alexandria, Va., and the University of Vir- 
ginia. He married, 27 December, 1907, Annie 
Laurie Pitt, daughter of Rev. R. H. Pitt, D. 
D. He is now Rector of the Church of the 
Epiphany, Barton Heights, Richmond, Va. 

58 Frances Maria^ Ritchie (Robert,^ William,^ 
Mary3 Middagh, Martha^ Beatty, John^), oldest child 
of Robert Ritchie (41) and Maria Barbara Fritchie, 



132 BEATTY-ASFOEDBY 

was born 23 June, 1810, at Frederick, Maryland.* Her 
mother was the widow of William Gary, Senior, by her 
first marriage. It is somewhat singular that the chil- 
dren of Maria Barbara Fritchie by both her marriages 
should be descendants of John Beatty and Susanna As- 
fordby, the Cary family descending from William 
Beatty (3), second son of John and Susanna Beatty, 
and the Ritchie family descending through Martha, 
their eighth child. Maria Barbara Fritchie also sur- 
vived her second husband, Eobert Eitchie, and died at 
Fort Ball, near Tiffin, Ohio, 23 May, 1834.t Frances 
Maria Eitchie was married 25 June, 1835, in Tiffin, 
Ohio, to George Ivnupp,t w^ho was born in Berkley 
County, Virginia, 3 December, 1812. According to a 
history of Seneca County, Ohio, he was Postmaster of 
Tiffin, Ohio, under five administrations, was County 
Treasurer two terms; Treasurer of the Seneca County 
Mutual Fire Insurance Company; County Commis- 
sioner, and, for many years, member of the Board of 
Education which gave to Tiffin some of the first schools 
in the State of Ohio. 
Children : 

Maria Knupp, died in infancy. 
Mary Eleanor Knupp (see seventh genera- 
tion). 

Frances Knupp, died in infancy. 
Martin Knupp (see seventh generation). 
Egbert Eitchie Knupp, born 21 September, 
1844, at Tiffin, Ohio; died 10 April, 1868, at 
Fremont, Ohio. 
96 vi Anna Louise Knupp, married in 1872, in De- 
troit, Mich., to Daniel Webster Holbrook. 
Children : 
i Alice Mason Holbrook, born 7 August, 

1874, at Cleveland, Ohio. 
ii George Holbrook, born 29 June, 1876, 
at Cleveland, Ohio. 

•See Section 13 of Appendix, Records 1 and 2, 
tSee Section 13 of Appendix, Records 1 and 2. 
iSee Section 13 of Appendix, Record 1. 



91 


• 

1 


92 


ii 


93 


iii 


94 


iv 


95 


v 



I 



BEATTY-ASFORDBY 133 

iii Ella Emelia Holbrook^ born 8 Febru- 
ary, 1883, at Indianapolis, Ind. 

97 vii Emma Frances Knupp (see seventh genera- 

tion) . 

98 viii George H. Knupp (see seventh generation). 



SEVENTH GENERATION 

92 Mary Eleanor"^ Knupp (Frances M.^ Ritchie, 
Robert,^ William,^ Mary^ Middagh, Martha^ Beatty, 
John^), second child of George Knupp and Frances Ma- 
ria Ritchie (58), was born 13 April, 1837. She married 
27 January, 1862, Dr. Theodore Asbury Lemon, of 
Plymouth, Indiana, by whom she had two sons. At his 
death she married his brother, Ezra Maxwell Lemon, 
11 September, 1870. He died suddenly of heart dis- 
ease 26 March, 1906. 

Children : 
99 i A son who died in infancy. 
100 ii Robert Walter Lemon, Civil Engineer and 
Land Surveyor. He was for sixteen years En- 
gineer in Chief for one of the largest Land 
Companies in the South-West; an English 
Company of capitalists owning eighteen mil- 
lions of acres in lower California. In March, 
1907, he dropped his profession of Engineer 
and entered into new relations wdth this Com- 
pany as their Assistant General Manager, with 
headquarters and offices at Ensenada, Lower 
California, Mexico. On 4 January, 1905, he 
married Louise Helen Wilson at San Diego, 
California. 
Children : 
i Dorothy Lemon, born 30 January, 1906. 
ii Cecelia Inez Lemon, born 1 June, 1907. 

94 Martin"^ Knupp (Frances M.^ Ritchie, Robert,^ 
William,'^ Mary^ Middagh, Martha^ Beatty, John^), 
fourth child of George Knupp and Frances Maria 
Ritchie (58), was born 4 August, 1839, in Tithn, Ohio. 
He was educated at Heidelberg and Kenyon Colleges 

134 



BEATTY-ASFORDBY 135 

and later studied law with Judge Pillar of Tiffin, Ohio. 
He practiced with Judge McCauley of Tiffin and was 
recognized as one of the ablest lawyers in Ohio. In 
1867 he removed to Ottawa, Ohio, where he engaged in 
law practice with Hon. David I. Brown. Wliile in Ot- 
tawa he married Mary Minerva Pugh of that place 26 
November, 1868. She was born 2 November, 1847, in 
Kenton, Ohio, and was the daughter of Day and Eliza- 
beth (Davis) Pugh. He soon after removed with his 
family to Deshler, Ohio, where he was elected to the 
office of Prosecuting Attorney of the County. In 1878 
he moved to Napoleon, Ohio, where he served two terms 
as Prosecutor with distinction and fidelity. After his 
term of office he continued the practice of law in Na- 
poleon till his death 12 February, 1908.* 
Children : 

101 i Frances Knupp, born 7 April, 1870; mar- 

ried Mr. Meekinson. 

102 ii Georgiana Knupp, born 23 June, 1874. 

97 Emma Prances'^ Knupp (Frances M.^ Ritchie, 
Robert,^ William,^ Mary^ Middagh, Martha^ Beatty, 
John^), seventh child of George Knupp and Frances 
Maria Ritchie (58), was born 6 February, 1849, near 
Fort Ball, Ohio. She was married 11 September, 1870, 
to W. T. Lemon. 

Children : 

103 i George Thomas Lemon, born 2 September, 

1871; married, 8 December, 1895, to Clara 
Augusta Large. 

Child : 
i Alice Lemon, died in infancy. 

104 ii Frances Christina Lemon, born 16 October, 

1874; married, 18 December, 1896, Joseph 
Lewis LaMar. , 

Children : 

i Belle LaMar, born 13 January, 1897. 
ii Harry Claude LaMar, born 23 Decem- 
ber, 1898. 

•See Section 14 of Appendix. 



136 BEATTY-ASFOEDBY 

iii A twin, who died in infancy. 

iv A twin, who died in infancy. 

V A child, who died in infancy. 

105 iii Walter Godfrey Lemon, born 9 February, 

1876; married, 8 April, 1898, Rose Green. 
Children : 

i Verna Frances Lemon, born 15 Decem- 
ber, 1901. 
ii Thelma Elise Lemon, born 6 February, 
1906. 

106 iv Annie Belle Lemon, born 18 February, 

1878; married, 1 June, 1899, George P. Myer. 
Child : 

i Theodore E. Myer, born 25 September, 
1903. 

107 V Harry Cassidy Lemon, born 24 October, 

1879; married, 22 September, 1906, Dorothy 
Effie Waugh. 

108 vi EoBERTA Knupp Lemon, bom 8 March, 1882 ; 

married, 2 July, 1907, McElroy Brown. 

98 George H.'^ Knupp (Frances M.^ Eitchie, Eob- 
ert,5 William,^ Mary^ Middagh, Martha^ Beatty, 
John^), eighth child of George Knupp and Frances 
Maria Eitchie (58), was born 11 May, 1852, at Tiffin, 
Ohio. October 10, 1869, he located at Ottawa, Putnam 
County, Ohio, and on 2 October, 1871, he was married 
to Helen J. Brown of that place; the daughter of Hon. 
David I. and Elizabeth Brown. 

Children : 

109 i Lillian F. Knupp, born 30 June, 1872 ; mar- 

ried, 23 April, 1893, to Angus E. Eosenberger, 
at Cridersville, Ohio. She separated from him 
after some years, obtaining a divorce in the 
Miami County Court of Common Pleas. She 
married again, 1 June, 1904, Charles C. Hite, 
at Waseka, Minn. They now, 1908, reside at 
Aberdeen, South Dakota. 
Children : 



BEATTY-ASFORDBY 137 

i Frances F. Eosenberger, bom 29 July, 

1896. 
ii Blanche Hite, born 8 July, 1906. 
Emma E. Knupp, born 9 March, 1874. 
Blanche B. Knupp, born 5 December, 1875; 
died at Tecumseh, Mich., 21 March, 1898. 
Ella A. Knupp, born 20 August, 1883. 
George R. Knupp, born 30 May, 1885; mar- 
ried, 18 August, 1907, Effie Kahle, in the city 
of Enid, Garfield County, Oklahoma. 
114 vi Helen M. Knupp, born 17 February, 1892. 



110 


11 


111 


iii 


112 


iv 


113 


V 



APPENDIX 



APPENDIX. 

Section 1. 

will of john beatty. 

"IN THE NAME OF GOD AMEN the Twenty 
Sixth day of Aprill Annoque Domini one Thousand 
Seven hundred & Twenty according to the Computa- 
tion of the Church of England, I JOHN BEATTY of 
Marbletown in the County of Ulster In America being 
very Sick & weak in body but of perfect memory & 
Remembrance praised be God Do make and Ordain this 
my last will & Testament in manner & forme following 
vizt. First I bequeath my soul into the hands of 
almighty God my maker hopeing that through the 
Meritorious death and passion of Jesus Christ my only 
Saviour and Redeemer to Receive free pardon and for- 
giveness for all my sins and as for my body to be 
buried in Christian burial at the discretion of my Exec- 
utrix hereafter nominated Nothing doubting but at 
the Glorious Resurection to Receive ye same again 
through the mighty power of God and as touching such 
worldly goods wherewith it hath pleased God to bless me 
in this life I give demise & dispose of the same in 
manner and forme following ITEM I give unto 
Susanna my trusty and well beloved wife all my Low- 
land on the fifth stick or piece between the Land of 
Thomas Cock & Hendrik Clews and the wood land 
Middowes & Shomps there to adjoyning along the 
bounds of Thomas Cock together with my house barne 
orchards pastures goods Debts & Moveable effects for 
the Term of her Naturall Life & after her decease to 
be parted in Equall shares amongst all my Children 
upon Condition that my said wife shall pay all my Law- 
full Debts, 3dly I give unto my Eldest son Robert upon 

141 



142 BEATTY-ASFOEDBY 

Consideration of my first born son one milch Cow 
Likewise that Certain piece of land he now lives on or 
so much as shall fall to his Share when all the wood 
land is di\dded. Beginning at a pine tree neare to the 
East End of a small swamp in the pine woods then 
along my bounds to Rochester highway as my bounds 
Runs To the bounds of Thomas Cock and farther so as 
my bounds Runs To the bounds Daniel Brodhead then 
along his bounds to an old marked pine tree & from 
thence with a strait line to the first station and if said 
Robert has too much for his part or share with the Rest 
of my Children he shall Loose it at the south west End 
or if he have too little he shall have it in the pine 
woods at the northwest End between the bounds of the 
said Daniell Brodhead and the swamp where the first 
began at the same breadth to make it a Complement 
with the Rest 4thly I give unto my son John all my 
third part in the mill Likewise twenty acres of Land 
near by which was promised to be Conveyed to me by 
Matthias Blanehan before the Trustees of Marbletown 
but afterwards said Matthias Blanehan told me that all 
there was above one hundred acres I might take for he 
would take no more as to pay one Shilling Quitt and 
when I surveyed it I found it to be twenty three acres 
above his hundred but his mother is to have said part 
of the ]\Iill as long as the Debts Is paid She Chance to 
Marry in the mean while then it is to be delivered up 
to my said Son John and he is to have it and no more 
for his part or share of my Estate Except his part of 
the moveables. Sthly I give to my Daughter Agness 
ten pounds for her dutifull Care of my family when 
My Children were small and Tender 6thly I give unto 
my poor afflicted & distressed brother Thomas Beatty In 
Ireland who hath through great sickness another visita- 
tion ffrom Almighty God is become blind & is now main- 
tained by the Charity of his half sister fifteen pounds 
Current silver money of New York with all possible 
speed it should be taken up at Interest Hopeing it will 
be taken from my hands and all the Rest of my family 



BEATTY-ASFOEDBY 143 

as an acceptable offering from Almighty God 7thly All 
the Eest of my woodland lying within the Limmitts of 
Marbletown & Rochester I give unto the Eest of my 
Children vizt : William Charles Thomas Edward James 
and Henry and to my two Daughters aggness & Martha 
to be divided amongst them in Equall parts or Else In 
quantity according to quallity as they shall thinck fitt 
& to take two honest neighbours upon Oath and to view 
said lotts to the best of their knowledge and to Lay so 
much Money upon the best as they shall think fitt to 
be paid unto them that Eeceive the worst lots & then 
said Eight Children to draw lots for said Land 8thly 
& lastly I Eevoke all other wills and Testaments preced- 
ing this date hereof & make this and no other to be 
my last will & Testament In Witness whereof I have 
here with put my hand & Seall the day and year First 
above written. 

"JOHN BEATTY (seal)" Liber 

CO., Office of the County Clerk, Kingston, Ulster 
County, N. Y., p. 132, copied from The Ancestry of 
Leander Howard Crall, by Frank Allaben, p. 3J^6. 

Section 2. 

WILL OF SUSANNA (ASFORDBY) BEATTY. 

"IN THE NAME OF GOD AMEN This Twentieth 
day of June one thousand Seven hundred forty and 
Two I Susanna Beatty of Monocosey in Prince George 
County in the province of Maryland Being Sick and 
Weak in Body But of perfect mind and Memory Blessed 
be God for the Same and Calling into Minde the mor- 
tality of my Body and knowing that it is appointed for 
all men once to Die I do make and ordain this my last 
Will and Testament. 

"And first of all I Give and Eecommend my Soul into 
the hands of God that Gave it, and for my Body I Eec- 
ommend it to the Earth to be Buried in a Christian like 
manner at the Discretion of my Executors and as touch- 



144 BEATTY-ASFOEDBY 

ing such worldly Estate where with it hath been pleased 
God to Bless me in this Life I Give Devise and Dispose 
of the same in the following Manner and form. 

^^IMPrs. : I give and Bequeath to my Grandson John 
Beatty son of My Son Eobert Beatty Deceased the Sum 
of ten shillings as his Birth Eight and I Give and Be- 
queath to my son Eobert Deceased Childring Namely 
John Beatty Moraia Beatty Susanna Beatty george 
Beatty Margrott and Jane Beatty a parcel of land Con- 
taining three hundred acres Being part of a Tract of 
land Called Eocky Crik Liuig on the west Side of 
Monocosey Beginning at the End of one hundred and 
Ninety five perches in fourth line of a tract Called 
Eocky Crick Beginning and running from thence North 
and by East one hundred and Thirteen perches then 
South Sixty Six Degrees East Two hundred and Sev- 
enty Seven perches then North Twenty Seven Degrees 
East one hundred pr. then South Twenty Seven Degr. 
west untill it Intersect a line drawn from the Begin- 
ning South Sixty Six Degrees East line thence to the 
Begining; and likewise all that Tract of land Called 
provedence granted to Edward Beatty Lying upon 
Linganore which Said tracts of land to be Equally Di- 
vided Between afs above named Childring of as they 
arrive at age or Marry and if any of them should die 
Before they heir their parts that then his her or their 
part or parts shall be Equally Divided Between them 
Livin and I Do appoint my Exets. to order and Divide 
afs above Lands for the above said Childring and in 
Case yt. any of the said Childring Should be willing to 
purchase of the rest their parts that then my Exects. 
att their Discretion May Sell to them and afs money 
Safe Deliver to afs Childring when they arrive at age 
or marry. 

"ITEM I give and Bequeath to my Daughter agness 
one feather Bed and Curtains one Eug one Blankett and 
my Side sadle and Bridle and all the Eest of my house- 
hold Goods Linins and wearing apparrells to be Equally 



BEATTY-ASFOEDBY 145 

Devided Between My Daughters agness Beatty and 
Martha Midday. 

"Furthermore my Desire is that all the rest of my 
Moveables be Equally Devided Between all my Chil- 
dring namely William, agness, John, Thomas, Edward, 
Martha, James, and an even Eight part Devided 
Equally Between my son Eoberts Children. 

"AND Lastly I Constitute and ordain My Two sons 
William Beaty and Thomas Beaty my only and sole 
Execus. of this my last will and Testament and I do 
utterly Disallow and Revoke all and Every other for- 
mer Testaments, wills, Legacies and Executors by me 
in any ways Before this time Named wilFd Bequeathed 
Ratifying and Confirming this and no other to be my 
last will and Testament IN WITNESS whereof I have 
here unto Sett my hand and seal the day and year above 
written. 

"Signed SeaFd Published pronounced 
and Declared by the said Susanna Beatty 
as her last Will and Testament in the 
presence of us the subscribers Vizt. 

(seal) 
his 
"John B Biggs 

mark 
"Elias Brock 
"Jos. M Wood 

her 
"Susanna Beatty" 
mark 

On the back of the will was written : 

"October the 30th 1745 John Biggs Elias Brock and 
Joseph Wood three of the Subscribing Witnesses to the 
within Will being Duely Sworn Depose and Say that 
they Severally Saw afs Testatrix Susanna Beatty sign 
and seal and heard her Publish and Declare the within 
to be her last will and Testament that at the time of 



146 BEATTY-ASFOEDBY 

her So doing She was to the Best of their Judgment 
and apprehension of Sound and Disposing mind and 
memory and that said John Biggs made his mark and 
the said Brock and Wood Subscribed their names as 
witnesses in the presence of the Testatrix to the Said 
Testament 

"Sworn to before me 

"D. Dulany Comry.'' Liber B. T., No. 1 

Office of the Register of Wills, Annapolis, Md., copied 
from The Ancestry of Leander Howard Crall, p, 3^7. 

Section 3. 

baptismal record of william beatty. 

"John Bettys 

Susanna Ashfordby William 9 June, 1695." 
■Baptismal and Marriage Registers of the Old 



Dutch Church of Kingston, Ulster County, N. Y., cop- 
ied from The Ancestry of Leander Howard Crall, p. 

3U' 

Section 4. 

^ baptismal and marriage records of JOHN MIDDAGH 

AND MARTHA BEATTY. 

"Jorris Middag Johannes Willem ISTottingham 
Mareytie Maartens 17 March, 1706 Grietie Rutse." 
-Baptismal Register of the Old Dutch Church at 



w " 



Kingston, Ulster County, N. Y., Transcrihed hy Ros- 
well R. Hoes, 1891, p. 76. 

"John Beaty Marta 

Susanna Ashfordby 20 April, 1707. 

Ibid, p. 80. 

"1728 24 Nov. Johannes Middag, j. m. and Mar- 
tha Bettis, j. d., both parties born 
and resid. in Mormel [Marble- 
town]. Banns registered, 3 Nov." 
Ibid, Marriages, p. 556. 



BEATTY-ASFOEDBY 147 

Section 5. 
will of william beatty. 



«l 



^In the Name of God^, Amen. This eighteenth day 
of May, Anno Domini One thousand seven hundred 
and fifty-seven, I, William Beatty, of Frederick County, 
and Province of Maryland, being ancient and weak in 
body, but of perfect mind and memory, thanks be to 
God for the same, and calling to mind the mortality of 
my body, and knowing that it is appointed for all men 
once to die, do make and ordain this my last Will and 
Testament. 

"First of all I recommend my Soul into the hands of 
God who gave it, and my body to the earth, to be bur- 
ied in a christian like and decent manner at the dis- 
eression of my Executor, and as touching such worldly 
estate wherewith it hath pleased God to bless me in this 
life, I give, devise and dispose of the same in the fol- 
lowing manner and form, viz : 

"First : my Will is that all my just del)ts and funeral 
charges be paid. 

"Secondly: I give and bequeath unto my well be- 
loved Son William Beatty, and to his heirs and assigns 
forever, my home plantation whereon I now reside, to- 
gether with all the lands that I have any right to within 
the bounds of a tract of land called "Dulanys Lott," 
lying in Frederick County aforesaid, and one negro boy 
named Abraham. 

"Secondly: I give and bequeath unto my three 
Daughters namely: Eleanor Young, Mary Cary and 
Annie Sheaif (Shoaff), and to their heirs and assigns 
forever, all the remainder of my lands and tenements 
that I have any right to in America, and all my negroes, 
Abraham excepted, to be equally divided among my said 
Daughters. 

"Thirdly : I give and bequeath unto my four children, 
and to their heirs and assigns forever, all the remainder 
of my estate both real and personal, which I have any 



148 BEATTY-ASFOEDBY 

right to in the World;, to be equally divided among 
them all four. 

"Fourthly : my will is that if any of my said four 
children should happen to dye before they arrive to the 
ao^e of twentv-one vears, and without lawful heir, that 
then his, her or their part or parts of said lands shall 
be equally divided among the remainder or surviving of 
my said Daughters, and that his, her or their part or 
parts of my personal estate shall be equally divided 
among the remainder or surviving of my said four chil- 
dren. 

"Fifthly: my will is that my said Son shall and do 
pay unto my said three Daughters the sum of thirty 
pounds current money, of said Province, to be equally 
divided among them my said Daughters, to be paid at 
the end of three years next after my decease, and that 
out of his part of my estate and not out of the whole. 

"And lastly : I do constitute, make and ordain my 
said Son William Beatty, the sole Executor of this my 
last Will and Testament. And I do hereby disalow, 
revoke and disannul all and every other former Will 
and Testament, Legacie, Bequest and Executed by me 
any ways before this time named willed or bequeathed, 
ratifying and confirming this and no other to be my 
last Will and Testament. 

"In witness whereof I have hereunto set my hand and 
seal the day and year above written. 

"Wm. Beatty (seal) 

"Signed, sealed, published, pronounced and declared 
by the said William Beatty as his last Will and Testa- 
ment in the presents of us the subscribers. The word 
life between the fifth and sixth and the words same in 
the twenty-sixth and seventh and the 'words of said 
lands and the word that all four between the seven- 
teenth and eighteenth and the word next between the 
twenty-first and twenty-second lines being all first writ- 
ten. 



BEATTY-ASFOEDBY 149 

"Thomas Beatty: Henry Ross: Jane Johnson: 

her 
Elizabeth E Smith, 
mark 
On the ofi Will was thus written, viz: 

"Frederick County: Thomas Beatty, Henry Ross, 
Jane Johnson and Elizabeth Smith, the subscribing 
witnesses to the foregoing Will being duly and sol- 
emnly sworn on the Holy Evangelist of Almighty God, 
depose and say, that they saw the Testator William 
Beatty, Senr., sign the foregoing Will, and heard him 
publish and declare the same to be his last Will and 
Testament, that at the time of his so doing he was to 
the best of their apprehension of sound and disposing 
mind and memory, and that they subscribed their re- 
spective names as witnesses to the said Will in presence 
of said Testator, and at his request. 

"Sworn before : J. Dickson, Dep. Comry of Fred. Co. 

"Aug. 20th, 1757." 
Land Office of Maryland, Set: 

I hereby certify, that the aforegoing is a true copy 
of the Will of Wm. Beatty of Frederick County, dated 
18th May, 1757, as recorded in Liber B. T. No. 2, 
(Wills) folio 375 etc., one of the record books on file in 
this office. 

"In testimony whereof, I have here- 
unto set my hand and affixed the Seal of 
(seal) the Land Office of Maryland, this fifth 

day of March, nineteen hundred and 
seven. 

Signed "E. Stanley Toadvin, _ 

"Commissioner of the Land Office." 

Section 6. 

will of cornelius carmack. 
"In the name of God Amen, this thirteen day of May 
Anno Dominy one thousand seven hundred & forty six. 






150 BEATTY-ASFORDBY 

I Cornelius Carmack of Monocksey in Prince Georges 
County & Province of Maryland Planter being sick in 
body but of good & perfect memory thanks be to Al- 
mighty God & calling to Rememberance the uncertainty 
of this Life, and that all Flesh must yield unto Death 
when it shall please God to Call, do make, constitute, 
ordain & declare this my last will and testament in 
manner & form following revoking disanulling & dis- 
claiming all & every will and wills heretofore by me 
made & this to be taken only for my last will and testa- 
ment, and none other. 

"First I give & commit my soul into the hands of 
Almighty God my Saviour and Redeemer & my body 
to be decently buried at the discretion of my executor 
hereinafter named and now^ for the settling of my im- 
proved estate, goods credits & chattels as it hath pleased 
God to bestow me do devise give and dispose of the same 
in manner and form following that is to say first I will 
that all my debts duties or credits as I owe right or con- 
curr to any manner of person or persons whatsoever 
shall be paid or contented within convenient time after 
my desae. by my trusty and well beloved son William 
Carmack of the place aforesaid whom I constitute and 
ordain my sole executor of my last will & testament. 

"Item. I give & bequeath to my well beloved wife 
Guein Carmack, the sum of five shillings currency be- 
sides what the law allows her. 

"Item. I give and bequeath unto my son John Car- 
mack a bed two sheets two pillos two blankets & over 
and above his share. 

"Item. I give & bequeath to my dafter Marey Coren 
one shilling Starlen. 

"Item. I give and bequeath to my dafter Elizabeth 
Evans one shilling starlen. 

"Item. I will that my executor equally divid the 
rest of my efl'ects between my four children namely, 
William Carmack, Mary Richards, John Carmack Cath- 



BEATTY-ASFOEDBY 151 

erine Richards & in testimony hereof I have hereunto 
set my hand and sels the day & year above written. 

"Cornelius Caemack (seal) 

"Test as present : 
John Justice J. 

his mark 

John Gregg, Stephen Richards." 
"State of Maryland, Frederick County, to-wit : 

"I hereby certify that the foregoing is a true copy of 
the last will and testament of Cornelius Carmack as 
recorded in Liber A. No. 1, folio 27 one of the will rec- 
ords in the office of the Register of Wills for Frederick 
County, Md. 

"In testimony whereof I hereunto sub- 
scribe my name and affix the seal of the 
Orphans' Court of said County this 23rd 
day of May A. D. 1907. 
Test: 

Signed Wm. B. Cutshall 

Register of Wills for Frederick County:" 

Section 7. 

extracts of land patents issued to john gary. 

"Saint Andrew," 118 acres, lying in Frederick 
County, patented to John Carie of Frederick County, 30 
November, 1752. — Land Commissioner's Office, An- 
napolis, Maryland, Liber Y. & S. No. 8, folio 284. 

"Dents Neglect," 201 acres, lying in Frederick Coun- 
ty, patented to John Cary of Frederick County, 14 
June, 1755.— Liber G. S. No. 2, folio 238. 

"The Resurvey on Panmure," 375 acres, lying in 
Frederick County, patented to John Cary of Frederick 
County, 4 July, 1754.— Liber G. S. No. 2, folio 416. 

"Foxes Hole," 100 acres, lying in Frederick County, 
patented to John Cary of Frederick County, 15 June, 
1773.— Liber B. C. & G. S. No. 46, folio 115. 

'Landstool," 151 acres, lying in Frederick County. 



<(i 



152 BEATTY-ASFORDBY 

patented to John Gary of Frederick County, 4 July, 
1775.— Liber B. C. & G. S. No. 49, folio 250. 

"Kemps Discovery," 150 acres, lying in Frederick 
County, patented to John Carey of Frederick County, 1 
May, 1764.— Liber B. C. & G. S. No. 28, folio 99. 

Section 8. 

will of john gary. 

"IN THE NAME OF GOD AMEN I John Gary of 
Frederick Town in Frederick County make this my last 
Will and Testament I resign my soul to its Creator in 
humble hope of its future happiness, as in the disposal 
of an all wise being infinitely good as to my Body my 
Will is that it may be buried near my two children 
Jacob and Nelly in the burying ground once my own 
land, well known in this place. 

"Item. I give and bequeath to my beloved wife Mary 
the house and one moiety of the lot where I now live 
during her natural life. I also give and bequeath to 
my said wife the rents of the Stone House on said lot 
for ten years after my decease. I also give and be- 
queath to my said wife the rents of all my lands and 
the houses in Baltimore Town for the term of six years 
after my decease, in order to enable her to give my 
children education, according to her discretion. I also 
give and bequeath to my said wife one third part of my 
personal estate after my just debts are paid. 

"Item. I give and bequeath to my son John Dow 
Cary my house and lot in Baltimore after the expira- 
tion of the above six years to him his heirs and assigns 
forever. 

"Item. I give and bequeath to my daughter Betsey 
Cary the whole lot on wdiich I now live after her moth- 
ers decease and the rents of the store house after the 
above ten years are past. I also give and bequeath to 
her a piece of land called "LOVELY PEGGY" which I 
bought of Joseph Hardmans heirs all of which to her 
her heirs and assigns forever. 



BEATTY-ASFOEDBY 153 

"Item. I give and bequeath to my son Robert Turner 
Gary all those pieces of land lying on Kitorton Creek 
on the East side thereof being part of "PANMUR" and 
part of ^TALATINE'^ and also part of "ZERO" to 
him his heirs and assigns forever. 

"Item. I give and bequeath to my son William Gary 
my plantation part of ''ROCKY CREEK" and also the 
tract of land called "KEMPS DISCOVERY" to him 
his heirs and assigns forever, on the express conditions 
that when he arrives at the age of twenty-three he shall 
pay to his brother John fifty pounds currency to his 
brother Robert one hundred pounds currency, and to 
his sister Betsey fifty pounds currency. 

"Item. I give and bequeath to my son David Gary 
all that part of the tract of land called "PANMURE" 
which lies on the West side of Kitorton Creek and also 
all that part of a tract of land called "ZERO" lying on 
the West side of said Creek to him his heirs and assigns 
forever. It is also my will and intent that the two 
third parts of my personal estate not disposed of be 
equally divided among my children and that my Ex- 
ecutor after named shall at her discretion sell off and 
dispose of all my chattels immediately after my decease 
and 

"Lastly I appoint and ordain my beloved wife Mary 
to be Executrix of this my last Will and Testament writ- 
ten with my own Eand, signed sealed and declared by 
the Testator as his last Will and Testament in presence 
of us the subscribers this twenty-third day of November, 
1773. "John Gary (seal) 

T. Bowles 
Jacob Young 
David Mitchell 

"On the day of May, 1777, came Jacob Young and 
David Mitchell two of the subscribing witnesses to the 
aforegoing Will and made Oath on the Holy Evangel- 
ists of Almighty God that they did see the Testator 



154 BEATTY-ASFOEDBY 

John Gary sign and seal the said Will and heard him 
publish pronounce and declare the same to be his last 
Will and Testament and at the time he did so he was 
to the best of their apprehension of a sound and dis- 
posing mind and memory and that they also did see 
Thomas Bowles the other subscribing witness sign his 
name as witness to the said Will in the presence of the 
Testator and in the presence of each other. 

"Sworn before T. Bowles, Dy. Com'sy. 
"Land Office of Maryland, Set : 

"I hereby Certify that the aforegoing is a true copy 
of the last Will and Testament of John Gary of Fred- 
erick Gounty, dated 23rd Nov. 1773, as recorded in 
Liber W. F. No. 2 (41) folio 452 &c., one of the Eecord 
Books on file in this office. 

"In testimony whereof, I have hereunto 
set my hand and affixed the Seal of the 
Land Office of Maryland, this fourteenth 
day of June, nineteen hundred and seven, 
(seal) 

Signed "E. Stanley Toadvin 

"Commissioner of the Land Office." 

Section 9. 
revolutionary records of philip richard francis 

LEE. 

"Council Chamber, 21st June 1784. 
"I do certify that the representative of 
Philip Richard Francis Lee is entitled to 
No. 3175. the proportion of Land allowed a Captain 
of the Continental Line for three years ser- 
vice. 

signed "Thomas Meriwether." 
"A warrent for 4,000 acres issued to Rich- 
ard Lee, Esquire, heir at law to Rich- 
ard Francis Lee Deceased, 21st July 1784." 

^Benjamin Harrison." 



('^ 



BEATTY-ASFORDBY 155 

The above two records are on file at the Land Office 
at Richmond, Va., and are certified by John W. Rich- 
ardson, Register of the Land Office, 12 September, 1907. 

The Records of the War Department, as certified by 
Adjutant General F. C. Ainsworth, "show that one 
Philip Richard Francis Lee served as a Captain in the 
3d Virginia Regiment, commanded by Colonel William 
Heth, Revolutionary War. He was commissioned March 
8, 1776. On the rolls of his company covering the 
period from September to December, 1777, he is re- 
ported wounded. He is shown to have died January 
29, 1778." 

Section 10. 

record of the ritchie family of frederick, mary- 
LAND. 

Copied from the old Ritchie Family Bible, now in 
the possession oT a descendant in Ohio. 
ROBERT RITCHIE, resident in the County of Angus, 
in the Kingdom of Scotland (had a brother named 

Thomas), married first to by whom he 

had issue three daughters. 

1 Jane. 

2 Catherine. 

3 And one other. 

Married second to Elspith Talbot or Colbet, by whom 
he had issue : 

4 John, the eldest son. 

5 William, who came to America about 1742-43. 
Besides several others, both male and female, 
whose names are forgotten. 

WILLIAM RITCHIE, above named, born 6" July 
Anno Domini 1726. Mary Middagh, his wife, daugh- 
ter of John Middagh and Martha Beatty, born 7th May, 
1732. Married 2nd August, 1751, by Rev. Mr. Hunter 
and had issue : 

1 William Ritchie Jr. born 27th March, 1753, mar- 
ried to Frances Oilman. 



««• 



156 BEATTY-ASFORDBY 

2 Martha Eitchie, born 5th August, 1755, married 
to Henry McCleery. 

3 John Kitchie, born 20th July, 1757, married to 
Catherine Beatty. 

4 Susan Ritchie, born 4th May, 1759. 

5 Mary Ritchie, born 10th April, 1761. 

6 Zarniah Ritchie, born 24th August, 1763. 

— • 7 Abner Ritchie, born 17th September, 1765, mar- 
ried to Mary Ann Jenkins. 

William Ritchie Sen'r. died 19th October, 1765. 

William Ritchie Jun'r. died 18th September, 1814. 

Martha Ritchie, wife of Henry McCleery, died 13th 
December, 1813. 

Mary Ritchie, died Monday, May 16th, 1816. 

Section 11. 

ritchie letters. 

"Annapolis 20th January 1800. 
"Dear Brother 

"Since my last Letter to you I was unfortunately 
attacked by the throat by a disease in some cases fatal, 
but in mine thank God! very trivial — By twisting my 
stocking foot around my neck — bathing my feet & 
sweating like a laborious Son of Vulcan, in two or 
three days it bade me farewell — Mr. Stevens had nearly 
kickd the Buckett — And two or three more who board 
with me were also attacked — The major part of us who 
were seized with the soar throat were first attackd with 
a swelling on the inneside — But mine oweing I dare say 
to my continually keeping it expanded by meat &c — 
swelFd on the outer side — But now, as it was before I 
was attacked, my only mortification is that I am obliged 
on account of my rav'nous appetite to continue last at 
the table — But I hope that false modesty will soon van- 
ish. 

"On Sunday last our Poorhouse valued at perhaps 
two thousand & odd pounds was burned to the ground 
—It was really a piteous sight to behold the poor 



BEATTY-ASFOEDBY 157 

Idiots shivering in the cold, lamenting the downfall of 
their quiet Habitation — How it caught fire — God 
knows ! — I suppose you are almost tired of my Letters 
— continually writing — not a word of news — and my 
Letters wrote so bad — Why Sir you must really excuse 
me — because people come here to have business done, & 
must start in a few moments — and those few moments 
only I have in which to arrange my Ideas which are 
few Indeed God knows — 

"I have been very busy this week or two, making out 
my Masters fees — you may rely upon it a student at 
Law mindfull of his buisiness & his masters has not 
much time to spare — 

"Study hard My Boy and be assured in three or four 
years you will reap the Benifit — Looking in a Balti- 
more Paper last night which was confirming the truth 
of Gister's being made by Boneparte which infuses De- 
lirium in Every Democratic perecranium — I was sur- 
prised on hearing that you were Consul for U. States 
at Cape Eepublican, & had a notion to get angry — 
when I recollected myself — reflecting that perhaps there 
might Be another Eobert Eitchie Esqr. That you may 
soon be able to fill that station with due Dignity is the 
sincere wish of an affectionate Brother. 

"Wm. Eitchie, Jun^ 

"Comp*^ to Father Mother & family Grandmother & 
fam Unkle Abner &c. &c. &c." 

"Annapolis 1801. 
"Affectionate tho neglectful Brother 

"Many revolving Suns have passed o'er my anxious 
head since I received your last Epistle and this Letter 
respectfully demands the cause of the apparent Inat- 
tention. 

"Tell me, if you please, what is now the subject of 
your daily occupation. Has Unkle Abner removed to 
Washington? what Business does he pursue, with 
whom connected. 

"As Mr. Potts sets out immediately I must hasten to 



158 BEATTY-ASFORDBY 

conclude my scratch lest he depart without it. Present 
my best Respects to Mr. Butler, tell him I long to hear 
from him and will not be arraigned at the Frederick 
Bar for some time. 

"If A. Ritchie still resides in Frederick tell him to 
write me. Farewell the carriage waits. 

"Yr. friend & Brother 

"Wm. Ritchie Jun." 
"August 1st. 1801. 
"Dear Robert 

"I received your last letter by Mr. Stone with all 
those Emotions which an affectionate Brother will ever 
feel on those occasions. I felt perhaps more than ordi- 
nary pleasure, partly from my not receiving a single 
line from you for a great length of time and partly from 
a gratification which will always result to my mind on 
seeing an only Brother, one as dear to my soul as my 
existence itself, alive to something like feeling and 
brotherly affection. 

"After I had written to you repeatedly, and received 
nothing in return, I had like to have made a rather 
precipitate resolution, not to have written you again. 
But nature on her formation of man implanted in his 
Bosom certain qualifications, which and which only ren- 
der life sustainable, and which cannot be eradicated un- 
til a man so far departs from his nature as to become 
inferior to the beasts, over whom natures God originally 
gave him Dominion. Among those passions or affec- 
tions of the mind is the love one brother should ever 
bear toward the other, and it was this mental stimulus 
which urged me me to write, whether You did or did 
not answer my letters. 

"Give me permission to inform you, my 
Brother, that you have unfortunately taken up as er- 
roneous an Idea as I have ever heard read or conceived 
of. You indirectly declare that you came from the 
Hands of the author of your existence, a Brute beast — 
Gracious Heaven protect me. / should be extremely 



BEATTY-ASFOEDBY 159 

sorry to think so indeed. You well know my Ideas of 
your Understanding. And that 3^011 should say you 
were by nature lazy, really astonishes me. You also 
know my Ideas of Duty. Duty towards your parents, 
yourself and Society. But it is now almost ten oClock 
you must absolutely excuse me writing more this even- 
ing for I am fearful Mr. Shauff has gone to bed as he 
starts early in the morning. 

"Write to me frequently give my love and respects to 
Father & Mother & Family & inform them I am pretty 
well — I did expect letters both from Mamma and Ma- 
riah by Mr. Stone but was disappointed, 

"Farewell and believe me to be 

"Your affectionate Brother 
"Wm. Eitchie Jun. 

This letter is addressed to "Mr. Eobert Eitchie, 
Fredk. Town Hon. by A. Shaeff Esq.'' All three let- 
ters are copied from the originals. 

Section 12. 

two ritchie documents. 

The first part of the following letter is missing, the 
original being much worn. The date, 1805, and the let- 
ters "ution," evidently the conclusion of the word "Con- 
stitution," and forming part of the heading of the let- 
ter, are still remaining in the upper right hand corner, 
as are also the last few words of the first three lines. 
On the back of the letter there is another one written, 
dated from Fort Constitution, January 10th, 1834, in 
which the writer announces his arrival at Fort Consti- 
tution, and mentions Captain Gates and Dr. Goodhue. 
The letter is unfinished and unsigned. 

"for the use of Capt. 
Gates' company. 

"I transmit you a communication, made to me by the 
commanding officer of Fort Constitution, representing 
the necessity of repairing the barrack house so far as 
to raise it another story, or of erecting a new building 



160 BEATTY-ASFOEDBY 

upon a totally different plan. This transmission, I am 
induced to make, from a consideration of the informa- 
tion you have given me in your letter of the 30th May, 
that when any repairs of buildings or fortifications are 
represented to me as necessary, the amount of which 
will exceed fifty dollars, that I should state the same to 
your office, that it may be submitted to the Secretary of 
War &c. 

"Capt. Gates has presented his accounts and vouch- 
ers for disbursements which were made from the last 
of March, when he last transmitted his accounts to you, 
to the period when I commenced acting as assistant Mil- 
itary Agent, amounting to 305 Dols. 15 1-2 Cts. ; also a 
disbursement made to Joseph Trickey, a seafaring man, 
for the freight of clothing and powder, who was pre- 
vented, by absence, from transmitting his account to 
Lieut. Swett, to whom it should have been offered, be- 
fore Mr. Swett last transmitted his accounts. I have 
made Capt. Gates a payment in consideration of the 
aforesaid disbursements, but have concluded it is my 
duty to make a representation to you upon the subject, 
and obtain your directions and a pecuniary remittance, 
previously to making any further payment, and have 
rendered him under an obligation to account to me for 
what has been paid, provided he should at any future 
time, by your request, transmit his accounts to you, and 
receive a payment of the whole, not through my hands, 
but immediately from yourself. 

"I would represent that the sum of money for which 
I am responsible, which I received when I commenced 
discharging the duty of ass^ M^ Agent, has been ex- 
hausted, and that I have since made expenditures since 
beyond the amount of two hundred dollars, for which 
1 depend upon a future remittance. With considera- 
tions of the highest esteem and respect 

"Yr most obed^ servant 
"Robt. Ritchie 

"Asst M. Agent." 



BEATTY-ASFOKDBY 161 

"THE STATE OF MARYLAND to Robert Ritchie 
of Frederick County, Esquire, Greeting. Be it known 
that reposing especial trust and confidence in your 
prudence and honesty you are appointed Notary Public 
for the State of Maryland to reside at Frederick Town 
in Frederick County in the said State, to hold the said 
office of Notary Public with all lawful fees, profits, 
privileges and benefits, to the said office of Notary Pub- 
lic belonging, until you shall be duly discharged there- 
from, and to execute the duties of the said office with 
diligence and fidelity, without favour, affection or par- 
tiality according to law. Given under the Seal of the 
State of Maryland this nineteenth day of October in the 
year of our Lord one thousand eight hundred and nine. 
Witness the honourable William Kitty Esquire Chan- 
cellor." 

Signed "Edw. Lloyd" "W. Kitty Chan^" 

Copied from the original documents. 

Section 13. 

ritchie bible records. 
Record 1. 

BIRTHS. 

"Wm. Gary Senr., was born the 19th day of June, 
1760, at Fredericktown, Maryland. 

"Maria Barbara Fritchie was born the 20th day of 
June, 1773, at Hagerstown, Maryland. 

"Cyrus Gary, son of Wm. and Maria Barbara Gary, 
was born the 13th day of Oct., 1794, in Georgetown, 

D. C. 

"Elizabeth, alias Eliza Gary, was born the 17th day 
of Aug. 1796, in Georgetown, D. G. 

"Wm. Gary, Junr., was born July 23rd, 1798, in 
Georgetown, D. C. 

"Robert Casper Jefferson Gary was born Nov. 22nd, 
1800, in Georgetown, D. C. 



162 BEATTY-ASFOEDBY 

"John Meddock (Middagh) Beatty Gary was born 
April 19th, 1803, in Georgetown, D. C. 

"Eleanor Susan Gary was born July 27th, 1805, in 
Georgetown, D. G. 

"Eobert Eitchie was born March 14th, 1784, in Fred- 
ericktown, Maryland. 

"Frances Maria Eitchie was born June 23rd, 1810, 
in Fredericktown, Maryland. (My mother) 

"George Gilman Eitchie was born Janry. 13th, 1817, 
in Fredericktown, Maryland. 

MARRIAGES. 

"Wm. Gary, Sen., and Maria Barbara Fritchie were 
married the 2nd of June, 1793. 

"Eobert Eitchie and Maria Barbara Gary (widow 
and relict of Wm. Gary, deceased,) were married the 
16th of May, 1808. 

"Eliza Gary and Lewis Green were married March, 
1815. 

"Eleanor Susan Gary and Henry Golgate Brish were 
married the 7th of Dec, 1824. 

"Piatt Brush & Eliza Green (widow and relict of 
Lewis Green, deceased,) were married May 26th, 1830. 

"Frances Maria Eitchie and George Knupp were mar- 
ried June 25th, 1835. 

DEATHS. 

"Wm. Gary, Sen., died in Montgomery Co., Mary- 
land, Oct. 12th, 1806. 

"Eobert Eitchie died in Fredericktown 22nd of Sept., 
1824, aged 40 years 6 months and 28 days. 

"Gyrus Gary' died the 1st day of April, 1832, aged 37 
years, 5 months and 13 days, at Lewisburg, Va. 

"Maria B. Eitchie died May 23rd, 1834, aged 60 
years, 11 months & 3 days, at Fort Ball, near Tiffin, 
Ohio. 

"Eobert G. J. Gary died Nov. 11th, 1837, aged 37 
years, 11 months, 23 days, at Fort Ball, Ohio. 



BEATTY-ASFOEDBY 163 



"Lewis Green died Feby. 1st, 1826, in Frederick- 
town, Maryland." 

Eecord 2. 



tfr 



'Maria Barbara Fritchie was born June 20th, 1773, 
and was married to William Gary on the 2nd day of 
June 1793. 

"Lewis Green and Eliza Gary were married by David 
F. Schoeffer, March 14th, 1815. 

"Gyrus Gary was born on the 18th day of October 
1794. 

"Elizabeth Gary was born on the 17th day of August 
1796. 

"William Gary, Junr, was born on the 23rd day of 
July 1798. 

"Eobert Gasper Jefferson Gary was born on the 22nd 
day of November 1800. 

"John Middock Beatty Gary was born on the 19th 
day of April 1803. 

"Eleanor Susan Gary was born on the 27th day of 
July 1805. 

"Frances Maria Eitchie w^as born on the 23rd day of 
June 1809. 

"George Eitchie was born on the 13th day of Janu- 
ary 1817. 

(I suppose these are Grandma Brush brothers and 
sisters, the last one George Eitchie was only a half 
brother.) 

(These are Grandma's Ghildren.) 

"Frederick William Green son of Lewis and Eliza 
Green was born on the 18th day of February 1816. 

"Matilda Green (that was my mother) was born on 
the 13th day of October 1818. 

"Lewis Edward Green was born on the 21st day of 
December 1821. 

"Eliza Gary Brush was born on the 30th day of April 
1832. 



164 BEATTY-ASFOEDBY 

"Mary Perlee Brush was born on the 1st day of No- 
vember 1834. 

"Lewis Green died Feb. 1st 1826. (This must be 
Grandfather Green.) 

"Frederick W. Green died June 18th 1879. 

"Eliza C. Brush died on the 29th day of November 
1833. 

"Lewis Edward Green died at Cold Springs Califor- 
nia March 8th 1850. 

"Mary Perlee Brush died March 21st 1851. 

"Matilda Green Stark died Aug. 19th 1853. These 
are Grandma's children. 

"Anna Green died 23rd . . . 1835, in the 80th 
year of her age. 

"Piatt Brush died Aug. 17th 1840. 

"Eliza Brush Widow of Piatt Brush and former 
Widow of Lewis Green died Sept. 23, 1864. 

'Eleanor S. Brish died March 14th 1885. 

"John M. B. Gary died at Tiffin, January 28th 1872, 
aged 69 years. 

"William Gary, Senior, died on the 12th day of Oct. 
1806, aged 46 years. 

"Cyrus Gary died on the 1st of April 1832, aged 37 
years and six months. 

"Maria B. Ritchie died April 22nd 1834. 

"Robert C. J. Gary died November 11th 1837, aged 
37 years and 11 months. 

Record 2 was copied in 1898 by Mrs. Maria V. Miner 
from her grandmother's (Elizabeth Gary Green) Bible. 

Section 14. 

obituary notice of martin knupp. 

"It was with the deepest feelings of sorrow that the 
community learned of the death of Mr. Martin Knupp 
Tuesday morning. He passed peacefully away at his 
home on West Washington street, having been in poor 
health for a number of years, . . . 



BEATTY-ASFORDBY 165 

"Martin Knupp was well known throughout this part 
of Ohio, and in all his business dealings was recognized 
as an honest and honorable man. He was a citizen re- 
spected by everybody. He was an uncompromising 
Democrat, and before his ill health was always found 
in the front ranks of his party laboring in its interest 
and for the advancement of its principles. 

"Mr. Knupp was born and raised in Tiffin, Ohio, 
where he attended Heidelberg college for a number of 
years. He was also a student at Kenyon college. He 
was a son of Hon. Geo. Knupp, who was a prominent 
citizen and politician of Tiffin. His mother was Fran- 
ces Ritchie, who came from a family of noted and tal- 
ented personages. He was born on the 4th of August, 
1841, and died Feb. 12th, 1908. 

"Mr. Knupp studied law with Judge Pillars of Tif- 
fin, who is now dead, and practiced with Judge Mc- 
Cauley, who is still living at Tiffin, being recognized as 
one of the ablest lawyers in Ohio. He moved to Ottawa 
in 1867, where he engaged in law practice with Hon. 
David I. Brown. He was married in Ottawa to Miss 
Mary Minerva Pugh on Nov. 26th, 1868, to which 
union two daughters w^re born, Frances and Georgia, 
who are left with their mother to mourn the departure 
of a companion and father. 

"From Ottawa Mr. Knupp removed with his family 
to Deshler, where he continued to practice law. During 
his residence in Deshler he was elected to the office of 
Prosecuting Attorney of this county, when he removed 
to Napoleon in 1878. He served two terms as Prose- 
cutor with distinction and fidelity, . . . 

"After his term of office he formed a law partnership 
with the late Walter Stephenson, which partnership 
continued until the removal of Mr. Stephenson from 
the county and state. 

"The Henry County Bar Association held a meeting 
at the Wellington last night, to take appropriate action 



166 BEATTY-ASFORDBY 

upon the death of Mr. Knupp, who was President of the 
Association. 

"The funeral will be held from the house Friday af- 
ternoon at 2 o'clock, Eev. Wm. A. Mast officiating." — 
The Northwest News, Napoleon, Ohio, February 13, 
1908. 



"Resolutions on the Death of Martin Knupp." 

"Whereas, on the 12th day of February, 1908, Martin 
Knupp, the honored and esteemed president of this Bar 
Association passed from our midst at the age of 67 
years : 

"We, the Henry County Bar Association, in special 
assembly, express our heartfelt sympatliy and sorrow 
upon the loss which this Association has sustained. 

"Resolved, That in the death of brother Knupp, our 
Bar has lost an able and esteemed member, who as a 
lawyer was always faithful and true; a student who 
thoroughly mastered his cases; and an untiring and 
zealous worker; whose briefs always showed rare tact 
and ability. He had high sense of professional honor. 
While he justly appreciated his relations to his clients 
and strictl}^ and fully performed his duty to them, 
neither the glory of success nor the hope of reward ever 
tempted him to take an unfair advantage or do a dis- 
honorable act, such was his high sense of professional 
honor that he regarded the ethics of his profession as 
sacred. 

"Resolved, That the sympathy of the Association is 
extended to his family in their bereavement and that a 
copy of these sentiments be spread upon the journal of 
the Court of Common Pleas of this County. 

"R. W. Cahill, 
"D. D. Donovan, 
"W. P. Duffy. 

"Committee of the Henry County Bar Associa- 
tion." — Tbid. 



BEATTY-ASFOEDBY 167 

Section 15. 

marriage license of william cary and maria bar- 
bara fritchie. 

"State of Maryland, Frederick County, Set. 

I HEEEBY CEETIFY, that a marriage license was 
issued to William Gary and Mariah Barbara Fritchie 
on the 2nd day of June in the year seventeen hundred 
and ninety-three (1793), as appears by the Eecord of 
Marriage Licenses of this office. 

"In testimony whereof, I hereunto sub- 
scribe my name and affix the seal of the 
(seal) Circuit Court for Frederick County, at 

Frederick City, Maryland, this 12th day 
of June A. D., 1907. 
Signed "Samuel T. Haffner 

"Clerk Circuit Court for Frederick Co." 

Section 16. 
will of william cary. 



<(i 



'I William Cary of the County of Greenbrier and 
State of Virginia, do make and ordain this instrument 
of writing as my last Will and testament hereby devis- 
ing and bequeathing all my estate Eeal, mixed and per- 
sonal to my dear wife Ophelia, to be hers absolutely for- 
ever. 

"And I do hereby appoint my wife and my friend 
James Withrow as my Executrix and Executor, and re- 
quest of the Court, to require of my friend Withrow no 
security, In witness of the above I have hereunto signed 
my name and affixed my seal this 30th day of April 
1857. 

"William Cary (seal) 

"Executed and acknowledged in the presence of W. 
H. Syme, Joel McPherson." 

"Greenbrier County Court, May Term 1857. 

"A paper purporting to be the last Will and Testa- 



168 BEATTY-ASFOEDBY 

ment of Wm Gary deed was produced in Court and 
proved by the oaths of Wm H. Syme and Joel McPher- 
son subscribing witnesses thereto, and ordered to be re- 
corded, whereupon James Withrow one of the Execu- 
tors therein named, who made oath thereto, entered into 
and acknowledged a bond in the penalty of $3000.00, 
conditioned as the law directs, no security being re- 
quired Certificate is granted the said Executor for ob- 
taining probates of said Will in due form liberty being 
reserved the Executrix named in the said Will to join 
in the probates when she shall think fit. 

Test : "J. McPherson Clerk." 

"The State of West Virginia : SS 

"Greenbrier County : 

"I Joel McPherson, Recorder in and for the County 
and State above mentioned, do hereby certify, that the 
foregoing, is a true transcript from Ihe records kept in 
my Office. 

"Given under my hand and seal of Office 
(seal) at Lewisburg, this 31st day of October 

A. D. 1865. 

"Joel McPherson 
"Recorder of Greenbrier County.'* 

"In the Orphans' Court for Frederick County. 

"In the matter of the estate of William Cary deced, 
"Whereas it appears that William Cary, deceased, did 
not die intestate, but a true certified copy of his last 
Will and Testament, duly proved in the May Term 
A. D. 1857 of the County Court of Greenbrier County, 
State of Virginia, made from the records of said Court 
and certified by the recorder thereof as required by law, 
has been this day filed in this court, and whereas by 
said Will, all the property Real, mixed and personal of 
the said William Cary was devised and bequeathed to 
his wife Ophelia Cary, And whereas the existence of said 
Will being unknown at the time of the settlement of 
the said estate, by the administrator Valerius Ebert 



BEATTY-ASFORDBY 169 

Esq, and the distribution thereof, was made according 
to the Testamentary laws of the State of Maryland, 
which said distribution has not been paid over by the 
said Administrator, Therefore Ordered this 14th day of 
Nov 1865, by this Court that said Will of William Gary, 
deed, and the appointment of Executor in the State of 
Virginia, be recorded in the records of this Court, that 
the said distribution heretofore made be set aside and 
annulled and that the administrator come in and re- 
distribute the said amount held for distribution accord- 
ing to the bequests of the said last Will and Testament 
of said William Cary deed. 

"L'J. Brengle 
"James Brunner 
"Joseph Routzahn.^' 

(There is no date to show when the above document 
was executed, but it was most likely in 1865, at the 
same time as the others in this connection.) 

"Know all men by these presents, that whereas, John 
C. Fritchie late of Frederick City, Maryland, did by his 
last Will and Testament give and bequeath to William 
Cary, late of Greenbrier Co, Virginia a portion of his 
estate, subject however to the life estate of Barbara 
Fritchie his wife who has since departed this life, and 
whereas, the said William Cary did by his last Will and 
Testament, give and bequeath to his wife Ophelia Cary 
his entire estate, personal, real and mixed, and ap- 
pointed the undersigned James Withrow executor of his 
said Will, 

"Now the said Ophelia Cary and James Withrow 
executor as aforesaid having been informed that the 
estate is now ready for distribution, They do hereby 
constitute', depute, and appoint James H. 0. Cary their 
true and lawful attorney, for them and in their behalf, 
to settle with V. Ebert Administrator "de bonis non'' 
of the said John C. Fritchie deced, and to receive from 
him, any amount that may be due to them, or either of 
them, and upon the receipt thereof, to execute such re- 



170 BEATTY-ASFOEDBY 

ceipt, or release, or other discharge as shall be sufficient, 
"They hereby ratifying and confirming, all, and what- 
soever their said attorney may lawfully do in the prem- 
ises. 

"In testimony whereof we the said Ophelia Gary and 
James Withrow executor aforesaid have hereunto set 
our hands and seals this 1st day of Nov. 1865. 

"Ophelia Gary (seal) 

"James Withrow (seal) 

"Extr of Wm Gary deed." 

"State of West Virginia: SS 
"Co. of Greenbrier : 

"This day came Ophelia Gary and James Withrow 
(the persons whose names are signed to the within 
power of attorney) personally before me in my said 
County, and acknowledged the same to be their act and 
deed, and desired me to certify the same. 

"Given under my hand this 6th of Nov, 1865. 

"D. G. B. Caldwell, J. P." 

"State of West Virginia : SS. 
"Greenbrier County : 

"I, Joel McPherson, recorder of Greenbrier County 
do hereby certify that D. C. B. Caldwell whose genuine 
signature appears to the above certificate, is and was 
at the time of signing the same a Justice of Greenbrier 
County, Lewisburg Township in said County, duly 
elected and qualified, and that all his official acts as 
such are entitled to full faith and credit. 

"Given under my hand and seal of Office 
(seal) at Lewisburg this 6th of November, A.D. 

1865. 

"Joel McPherson Recorder 
of Greenbrier County W. Va." 

"State of Maryland, Frederick County, 

"I James H. 0. Gary, the attorney named in the 
above and within power of attorney do hereby ac- 



BEATTY-ASFOEDBY 171 

knowledge the receipt of the sum of Two hundred and 
thirty five dollars and ten cents, paid me by Valerius 
Ebert, administrator of Wm. Gary deceased, being the 
full amount of the said estate as settled and redis- 
tributed this day under the Will of said Wm Gary deed, 
under the order of the Orphans' Gourt of Frederick 
Gounty, and I do further in virtue of said power Release 
and discharge the said Valerius Ebert from all further 
or any claim or demand of in to or on account of said 
estate of Wm Gary deed, whether by the said James 
Withrow, Ophelia Gary or individually or in any ca- 
pacity, 

"Witness my hand and seal this 14th day of Novem- 
ber, 1865. 

"Witness "J. H. Otey Gary" (seal) 

"T. L. McLean 
State of Maryland, Frederick County, Set : 

I hereby certify that on this 14th day of November, 
1865, before the subscriber Eegister of Wills in and for 
the Gounty and State aforesaid personally appeared 
James H. 0. Gary and acknowledged the aforegoing 
Release to be his act and deed. 

"T. L. McLean Register." 
"State of Maryland, Frederick Gounty, to-wit : 

"I hereby certify the foregoing is a true copy of the 
Will of William Gary deceased, as recorded in Liber T. 
L. McLean, No. 1, folio 197 &c, one of the Records for 
recording in the Office of the Register of Wills for Fred- 
erick Gounty. 

"In testimony whereof I hereunto set my 
hand and affix fhe seal of the Orphans' 
Gourt of Frederick Gounty this 12th day 
of June A.D. 1907. 

(seal) "Test: 

"Wm. B. Cutshall 
"Register of Wills for Frederick County." 



« 



INDEX 



INDEX 



Abraham, 147. 

Adela, of France, 92. 

Ainsworth, F. C. (Adjutant Gen- 
eral), 113, 155. 

Alfonso, King of Arragon, 95. 

Alfred, the Great, 92. 

Alfritha, of England, 92. 

Alice, of Courtnay, 95. 

Alice, of Vermandois, 92. 

Alpin, 15. 

Amhallgadh, 15. 

Arbuckle, Mary Sklles, 115. 

Archer, Anne, 121. 

Sampson (Lieutenant), 121, 
130. 

Arnould I., Count of Flanders, 
92. 

Arnould II., Count of Flanders, 
92. 

Asfordby, 130. 

Andrew, 22, 29, 30, 37, 38, 

51. 
Arms, 21, 23. 
Catherine, 103. 
Edward, 22, 29, 30, 37, 38, 

51, 56. 
Eleanor, 103. 

John. 22, 25. 29, 30, 33, 37, 
38, 45. 47, 48, 52, 56, 60, 
67, 73, 78, 84, 90, 97. 

Susanna, 16, 25, 29, 33, 37, 
41, 46, 48, 52, 56. 60, 67, 
73, 78, 84, 90, 97, 101, 
102, 103, 107, 108, 111, 
130, 132, 141, 146. 

William, 21, 22, 25, 29, 30, 
33, 37, 38, 41, 45, 48, 51, 

52, 56, 60, 67, 73, 78, 84, 
90, 97, 102, 103, 130. 

Ashfordby, Susanna, 146. 
Aske, Robert (Sir), 34. 
Avisa, of Gloucester, 95. 
Aymer Taillefer, Count of An- 
gouleme, 95. 

B 

Bagrave, Elizabeth, 55. 
Baldrick, 85. 



Baldwin, Briscoe G. (Judge), 

115. 
Baldwin I., Count of Flanders, 

92. 
Baldwin II., Count of Flanders, 

92. 
Baldwin III., Count of Flanders. 

92. 
Baldwin IV., Count of Flanders, 

92. 
Baldwin V„ Count of Flanders, 

92. 
Beattie, Edward, 16, 
James, 16. 
Robert, 16. 
William, 16. 
Beatty, 111, 130. 

Agnes, 104, 142, 143, 144, 

145. 
Anne, 107, 108. 
Arms, 3, 15, 17. 
Catherine, 111, 156. 
Charles, 104, 105. 143. 
Edward, 103, 105, 143, 144, 

145. 
Eleanor. 107, 108. 
Eli, 107. 
Elijah. 105. 
Elizabeth, 105. >^ 
Ezekiel, 105. ' 
Ezra, 105. 
Family, 101. 

of Ulster County, N. Y., 101. 
George, 144. 
Henry, 104, 106. 143. 
James, 105, 106, 143, 145. 
Jane, 144. 

John, 15, 16, 25, 29, 33, 37, 
41, 46, 48, 52. 56, 60, 67, 
73. 78, 84, 90, 97, 101, 
102, 103, 104. 107, 108, 
111, 130, 132, 141, 142, 
143, 144, 145, 146. 
Margrott, 144. 
Martha, 105, 108, 110, 111, 

132, 143, 145, 146, 155. 
Mary, 105, 107, 108, 109, 

113, 114. 
Moraia, 144. 
Robert, 102, 104, 106, 111. 

141, 142, 144, 145. 
Sarah, 105. 



175 



176 



BEATTY-ASFOEDBY 



Beatty, Susanna, 103, 104. 106, 
132, 141, 143, 144, 145. 

Susanna Asfordby, 107, 143. 

Susannah, 105. 

Thomas, 102. 103, 105, 142, 
143, 145, 149. 

Thomas (Judge), 105. 

William, 103, 104, 107, 109, 
132, 143, 145, U6, 14T. 
148, 149. 

William (Captain), 114. 

William (Colonel), 107. 
Beaty. John, 146. . 

Marta, 146. 
Beauchamp, John (Sir), 96. 

Margaret, 96. 
Beckwith, 68. 

Adam, 72. 

Arms, 68, 69. 

Jennet, 73, 78. 

Joanetta, 64, 78. 

Hamon, 71. 

Hercules (Sir), 71. 

Lady Dame (Bruce), 71. 

Nicholas, 71. 

Thomas, 72, 78. 

William, 71, 78. 

William (Sir), 64, 72. 73. 
Berenger II., King of Italy, 92. 
Bergen, 111. 

Breckje Hansen, 110. 

Family, of Brooklyn, 110. 

Hans, 110. 

Hans Hansen, 110. 
Bertha, of Laon, 91. 
Betagh, Edward, 16. 

Garrett, 16. 

John, 15. 16. 

Henry, 15. 
Bettis, Martha. 146. 
Bettys, John. 146. 
Biggs. John B., 145, 146. L1> 

Blllesby Arms, 26, 27. 

Arms, 26, 27. 

Cicely. 22, 29. 30. 37. 51. 

John. 21, 22, 26. 29, 87, 51. 

Muriel, 21. 

Richard, 26. 

Robert. 21. 

Thomas, 26. 
Blanche, of Artois, 96. 
Blanehan, Matthias. 142. 
Bohan, John, 38. 56. 

Margaret (Heneage), 38. 
Bolingbroke, Countess of, 21. 
Bolton, Elizabeth, 63. 

William, 63. 
Bonamy (the Jew), 80. 
Bowles. T.. 153, 154. 

Thomas, 154. 
Bratofte, Maude, 55. 



Bratofte, Thomas (Sir), 55. 

William, 34. 
Brengle. L'J., 169. 
Brian Boru, 15, 101. 
Brish, Eleanor S.. 164. 

Henry Colgate (General), 116, 

162. 
Mrs., 116. 
Brock, Ellas, 145, 146. 
Brodhead, Daniel, 142. 
Brown, David I. (Hon.), 135, 
136, 165. 
Elizabeth, 136. 
Helen J., 136. 
McElroy, 136. 
Browne, Anthony (Sir), SO. 

Joan, 30. 
Bruce, William (Sir), 71. 
Brunner, James, 169. 
Brush, Eliza, 164. 

Eliza Gary. 120, 163, 164. 
Elizabeth Gary Green, 120. 
Mary Perlee, 120. 164. 
Piatt. 120. 162. 164. 
Burgan, Elizabeth, 55. 
Burton, Martha, 25, 29. 33, 37, 
41, 46, 48, 52. 56, 60, 67. 
73, 78, 84, 90, 97, 103. 
William, 25. 29, 33, 37, 41, 
46, 48, 52, 56, 60, 67, 78. 
78, 84, 90, 97, 103. 
Butler, Mr., 158. 



Caemack, Cornelius, 151. 
Cahill, R. W.. 166. 
Caldwell, D. C. B., 170. 
Capet, Hugh, 92. 
IBCarey, John, 152. 
iCarle, John, 151. 
-Carlisle, John G. (Hon.), 129. 
'S- William K.. 129. 
Carmack, Cornelius. 107, 149, 
150. 151. 
Elizabeth, 107, 109. 
Guein, 150. 
John, 150. 
William, 150. 
Carrs, The, 125. 
Gary, Ada, 125. 
Alice, 125. 
Ann Fowke, 119. 
Betsy. 110, 152. 153. 
Charles William, 115. 
Cyrus. 114, 115, 161. 162, 

163, 164. 
Cyrus Robert, 115. 
David, 110, 153. 
Eleanor, 110. 



INDEX 



177 



Gary, Eleanor Susan, 115, 162, 
163. 
Eliza, 115, 120, 126, 127, 

161, 162, 163. 
Eliza Eleanor, 122. 
Eliza Green, 115. 
Elizabeth, 110, 115, 120, 126, 

127, 161, 163. 
Family, 132. 
George, 113, 119, 125. 
Henrietta Harrison, 122, 123. 
Jacob, 110, 152. 
James, 113. 

James Hervey Otey, 121, 122. 
James H. O., 169, 170, 171. 
J. H. Otey, 171. 
John, 109, 113, 114, 151, 152, 

153 154 
John 'Dhu' (Dr.), 109, 113, 

118, 152. 
John James, 120, 125. 
John Mathews, 121. 
John Meddock Beatty, 162, 

163, 164. 
John Middagh Beatty, 115, 

162, 163. 164. 

Louisa Madden. 123, 127. 

Maria Barbara, 161, 162. 

Maria Barbara Fritchie, 117. 

Maria Catherine, 122. 

Mary, 109. 147, 152, 153. 

Mary E., 125. 

Mrs., 114. 

Nelly. 110, 152. 

Ophelia, 168, 169, 170, 171. 

Roberta, 123, 124. 130, 131. 

Robert Casper Jefferson, 115, 
123, 130, 161, 162, 163, 
164. 

Robert Turner, 110. 153. 

Sallie Mathews. 123. 128. 

William, 110, 113, 114, 115, 
120, 121, 123, 124, 127, 
128, 129, 130, 132, 153, 
161, 162, 163, 164, 167, 
168. 169, 171. 

William Robert. 122. 

Willie Anne. 123. 129. 
Cashary, Julius. 126. 
Charibert, Count of Laon, 91. 
Charlemagne. 91. 92. 
Charles Martel, 91. 
Charles I. (the Bald), 91. 
Chaworth, John (Sir), 71. 
Chester, R., 102. 
Clapham, Josias, 109. 
Clews, Hendrik. 141. 
Cliderow. Mary, 64. 
Cock. Thomas, 141, 142. 
Cockfield, Alice, 80. 

Robert (Sir), 80. 



Colbet, Elspith, 155. 
Colville, Anne, 55. 

Francis, 55. 
Conchgall, 15. 

Conrad I., King of Germany, 92. 
Constable, Agnes, 89. 

John (Sir), 89. 
Constantine, 15. 
Corbin, James Parke, 131. 

Jane Willford, 131. 

Richard, 131. 
Coren, Marey, 150. 
Coventry. John, 21. 

Petronella, 21. 
Cracroft, Agnes, 59. 

Arms, 59, 61. 

Joan, 42. 

Joana, 60. 

John, 45, 59. 

Robert, 42, 59. 
Crall, Leander Howard, 102. 

108, 111, 130, 143, 146. 
Crawford, Earl of, 96. 

William A., 119. 
Craycrofte, Mary, 55. 

Thomas, 55. 
Crewe, Margaret, 47. 

Peter, 47. 
Crowe, Frances, 121. 
Cutshall, Wm. B., 151, 171. 

D 

DaVall, Isabella, 80. 

Thomas, 80. 
Davis. Elizabeth, 135. 
de Arches, Isabel, 86. 

Robert (Sir), 86. 
de Asfordby, John, 21. 

Jordan, 21. 

Jordan (Sir), 21. 

Margaret, 21. 

Muriel, 21. 

William. 21. 

William (Sir), 21. 26. 
de Beningworth, Geoffry. 21 
de Billesby. Eudo, 26. 

John, 26. 

Muriel, 26. 

Robert. 26. 
de Chauncey. Gerard, 21. 
de Clare, Avica, 74. 
de Cokefleld, Robert. 79. 
de Cracroft, Robert, 59. 

Stephen, 59. 

Walter, 59. 

William, 59. 
de Emildon. Richard, 77. 
de Estoteville. Enebruga 85. 

Patrick, 85. 

Robert, 85. 



178 



BEATTY-ASFOEDBY 



de Flynton, Herbert, 86. 

Margaret, 86. 
de Gawkethorpe, Jane, 63. 

John, 63. 

Henry, 63. 

Matilda, 63. 
de Gisburn, John, 77. 
de Gunby, Alice. 59. 

Robert, 59. 
de Hiltoft, Alice. 86. 

William (Sir), 86. 
de Langtun, Beatrix, 85. 

Pagan (Sir), 85. 
de Malebisse, Elizabeth, 72. 

Hugh, 68. 

Hugo, 68. 

John, 68. 

Richard, 68, 71. 

Richard (Sir), 71. 

Thomas (Sir), 72. 

William, 71. 

William (Sir), 72. 
de Manithorp, Mariana, 85. 

William, 85. 
de Mowbray, Eleanor, 96. 

John, 96. 

Margaret, 96. 
de Muer, Alice, 86. 

Ralph, 86. 
de Multon, Julian, 79. 

Thomas, 79. 
do Mumby, Agnes, 86. 

William, 86. 
de Percy, Emma, 68. 

William. 74. 

William (Sir), 79. 
de Plumpton, Helena, 74. 

Nigel, 74. 

Peter (Sir), 74. 

Robert, 74. 

Robert (Sir), 74. 

William (Sir), 77. 
de Rapelje, 111. 

Joris Jansen, 110. 

Sara, 110. 
de Rons, Lucy, 74. 

William (Sir), 77. 
de Schypwith, Jeffrey, 85. 
de Segrave Arms, 96. 

Elizabeth, 96. 

John, 95. 
de Skipwith, John, 86. 

John (Sir), 86. 

William, 86. 

William (Sir), 85. 
de Tatershall, Robert, 34. 
de Thorpe, Alice, 86. 

John (Sir). 86. 

William (Sir). 86. 
de Warwick, Juliana, 74. 

Richard, 74. 



de Welles, Eudo, 96. 

John (Lord). 96. 

Lionel (Sir). 96. 

Margaret, 96. 
de Westmeales, Walter, 59. 
de Westwick, Isabella, 74. 

Serlo, 74. 
de Vescy, John, 74. 
Dickson. J., 149. 
Dolbh, 15. 

Donovan, D. D., 166. 
Douglas, Stephen A.. 126. 
Drake. James P. (General), 125. 
Dressback. Catherine Elizabeth, 
126. 

Dr., 126. 
Duffy, W. P., 166. 
Dulany. D.. 146. 

Daniel, 103. 
Dymoke, Alice. 89, 90, 97, 102. 

Arms, 97. 

Lionel (Sir). 56. 89, 90, 96. 

Thomas (Sir), 96. 



Ebert, V., 169. 

Valerius, 168, 171. 
Edgar, Atheling, 92. 
Edward I., King of England, 

95 96. 
Eland, ' Elizabeth. 29, 38, 55, 
56. 

John, 29, 38, 55. 
Eldred, 74. 

Eleanor, of Aquitaine. 95. 
Eleanor, of Normandy, 92. 
Eleanor, of Provence, 95. 
Eleanora, of Castile, 95. 
Elphide, 91. 
Eltinge. Isaac, 109. 

Mary. 109. 

Rudolph. 109. 

Sarah. 109. 
Ermengard. 92. 

Ethelwolf. King of England, 92. 
Evans, Elizabeth, 150. 



Feamster, Claude Newman, 128, 
Daisy Patton. 128. 
Lewis Alderson, 128. 
Ophelia Mathews. 128. 
Otey Turk, 128. 
Royden Keith, 128. 
Thoma.s Lewis, 128. 
Thomas Paul, 128. 
William Cary. 128. 
Zoe Louise, 128. 



INDEX 



179 



Ferdinand III., King of Castile, 

95. 
Ferrers, John (Sir), 71. 
Fitzhugh, Henry, Lord, 83. 

Lord, 80. 
Fitz Ralph, Simon (Sir), 86. 
Fitz Simon, Margaret, 86. 

Ralph (Sir). 86. 
Fitzsimons, John (Sir), 34. 
Fitzwilliam, Catherine, 89. 

Richard (Sir), 89. 
Flewellen, E. A. (Dr.), 125. 

Frances, 125. 
Foljambe, Alice, 77. 

Geoftery (Sir), 77. 
Foulk v., Count of Anjou, 92. 
Fowke, Ann, 119, 125. 

William, 119. 
Francisco, Mr., 127. 
Franke, Agnes, 63. 

Margaret, 64. 

Nicholas, 64. 

William, 64. 
Fritchie, Barbara, 114, 169. 

Casper (Dr.), 114, 124. 

John, 114. 

John C, 169. 

Maria Barbara, 114, 117, 120, 
123, 124, 131, 132, 161, 
162, 163, 167. 
Fulnetby Arms, 55, 57. 

Elizabeth, 38, 56. 

Jeffry (Sir), 55. 

John, 38, 55. 

John (Sir), 55. 

Thomas, 55. 

William, 55. 



Galagher, Mr., 127. 
Garrett. 15. 

Gascoigne, Alice, 45, 60, 64, 73, 
78, 83. 

Arms, 63, 65. 

Joane, 83. 

John, 45, 60, 64, 73, 78. 83. 

Nicholas, 64. 

William, 63, 64, 73, 78. 

William (Sir), 83. 
Gates, Captain, 159, 160. 
Geoffrey, Prince, of Scotland, 

101. 
Gilman, Frances, 114, 117, 124, 

155. 
Gisburn, Alice. 77. 
Goddard, Alice, 30. 

Walter, 30. 
Goffrey, Prince, of Scotland, 15. 
Goodhue, Dr., 159. 



Grant, Mary, 55. 

Thomas, 55. 
Green, Alice Cary, 126. 

Anna, 164. 

Charles Dressback, 127. 

Eliza, 162, 163. 

Elizabeth Cary, 164. 

Frederick William, 120, 126, 
127, 163, 164. 

Harry Ely, 127. 

Lewis, 120, 126, 127, 162. 
163, 164. 

Lewis Edward, 120. 127. 163, 
164. 

Matilda 120, 127, 163. 

Rose, 136. 

William McKinnie, 127. 
Greene, John (Sir), 34. 
Greenfield, John, 45, 60. 

Margaret, 45, 60. 
Gregg, John, 151. 
Gresley, Eustachia, 77. 
Greystock, Maud, 96. 

Ralph (Lord), 96. 
Griffith, Joan, 97. 

Richard. 97. 
Guelph I., 91. 



H 



Haffner, Samuel T., 167. 
Halys, Alice, 95. 

Roger (Sir), 95. 
Hardinshed, 34. 
Hardman, Joseph, 152. 
Harrington, Margaret, 37. 
Harrison, Benjamin, 154. 
Helias, Count of Maine, 95. 
Heneage Arms, 30, 31. 

Elizabeth, 22, 29, 30. 

John, 22, 30, 38, 56. 

Margaret, 38, 56. 
Henry IV., Emperor of Ger- 
many, 92. 
Henry I., King of England, 92. 
Henry II., King of England, 95. 
Henry III., King of England, 95. 
Herbert II., Count of Verman- 

dois, 92. 
Heringe, Elizabeth, 72. 

John, 72. 
Hermentrude, of Orleans, 91. 
Heslerton, William (Sir), 72. 
Heth, William (Colonel), 155. 
Heton, Isabel, 64. 

William, 64. 
Hickey, John, 125. 

Ross Cary, 125. 
Hildegarde, of Swabia, 91. 
Hillum, 63. 



180 



BEATTY-ASFOKDBY 



Hite, Blanche, 137. 

Charles C 136. 
Hoes. Roswell R., 146. 
Holbrook, Alice Mason, ±6^. 

Ella Emelia, 133. 

George, 132. 
Hooker, Isabel, 47. 
Hugh. 85. 
Hunter, Rev. Mr., 155. 



Isabella, of Angouleme, 95. 



Jansen, Rata, 104. 

Janette, 104. 

Thomas, 104. 
Jefferson, Thomas, 113. 
Jeffrey, Prince, 15. 
Jenkins, Mary, 112. 

Mary Ann, 156. 
John, King of England, 95. 
John, Lord Mowbray, 72. 
John Mor, 15. , , ^, . ,,-, 

John, Sir (Lord Malebisse), 71. 
Johns, Bishop, 116. 
Johnson, Jane, 149. 
Judith, 91. 
Justice, John. 151. 

K 

Kahle, Effle, 137. 
Karlman, 91. 
Kenermond, Agnes, 26. 

John, 26. 
Kent, Susan, 47. 

Thomas, 47. ,. ..^n 

Key, John Ross (General), 113. 
Kighley, Margaret. 64, 73, 78. 

Richard, 64. 73. 78. 
King. Alice, 45, 60. ^ 

William, 45, 60. 
Kingston, Eleanor, 89, 90, 97. 

Elizabeth, 89. 

John, 89, 97. 
Kinsolving, Arthur Barksdale 
(Rev.), 131. 

Charles, 131. 

George Herbert (Bishop). 131. 

Lucien Lee (Bishop), 131. 

Ovid A. (Rev.). 131. 

Roberta Cary, 131. 

Wythe Leigh (Rev.), 131. 
Kirkman, Anne, 47. 

John, 47. 
Kirmond, Agnes, 26. 

John, 26. 



Kitty, William, 161. 
Knupp, Anna Louise, 132. 

Blanche B., 137. 

Ella A.. 137. 

Emma E., 137. 

Emma Frances, 133, 135. 

Frances, 132, 135, 165. 

George, 132, 134, 135, 186, 
162, 165. 

George H.. 133, 136. 

George R.. 137. 

Georgia, 165, 

Georgiana, 135. 

Helen M., 137. 

Lillian F., 136. 

Maria, 132. 

Martin, 132, 134, 164, 165, 
166. 

Mary Eleanor, 132, 134. 

Robert Ritchie, 132. 
Kyme, 22. 

Agnes, 51. 

Thomas, 51. 



Lafayette, General, 116. 
La Mar, Belle, 135. 

Harry Claude, 135. 

Joseph Lewis, 135. 
Lambert, 55. 
Landers, Douglas, 126. 

Flossie, 126. 

J. K., 126. 

Malcolm, 126. 
Langdale, Cicely. 83. 
Langton, Alexander, 22, 29, 80, 
37, 51. 

Arms, 34, 35. 

Cicely (Billesby), 22. 

Elizabeth, 83. 

Jane, 22, 29, 30, 37, 51. 

John, 34, 37, 51. 

John (Sir), 83. 

Thomas, 37. 

Thomas (Sir), 34. 

William, 34. 
Large, Clara Augusta. 135. 
La Warr. John (Lord), 30. 
Lee. Alice. 113, 119. 

Elinor, 113. 

Philip Richard Francis, 113, 
154. 

Philip Richard Francis (Cap- 
tain), 155. 

Richard. 154. 

Richard Francis, 154. 
Lemon, Alice, 135. 

Annie Belle, 136. 

Cecelia Inez, 126. 

Dorothy, 134. 



INDEX 



181 



Lemon, Ezra Maxwell, 134. 

Frances Christina, 135. 

George Thomas, 135. 

Harry Cassidy, 136. 

Roberta Knupp, 136. 

Robert Walter, 134. 

Thelma Elise, 136. 

Theodore Asbury (Dr.), 134. 

Verna Frances, 136. 

Walter Godfrey, 136. 

W. T., 135. 
Lemyng, Agnes, 47. 

Anne, 47. 

Roger, 47. 
le Newcomen, Andrew, 42. 

Gilbert, 42. 

Hugh. 42. 

Robert, 42. 

Walter, 42. 

William, 42. 
le Vavasour, John (Sir), 79. 

Henry (Sir), 80. 

Mauger (Sir), 79. 

Robert (Sir), 79. 

William (Sir), 79, 80. 
Levericke, Catherine, 51. 

William, 51. 
Lincoln, Earl of, 74. 

Johana, 22. 
Livingston family, 101. 

Robert. 101. 
Lloyd, Edw., 161. 
Loarn, 15. 

Louis VIII., King of France, 96. 
Louis I., le Debonnaire, 91. 
Louis, le Gros, King of France, 

95. 
Louis VII., of France, 95. 
Louis, St., 95. 
Lumpkin, Judge, 125. 

M 

Maartens, Mareytie, 146. 
Malcolm Canmore, King of 

Scotland, 92. 
Malebisse, Elizabeth, 72. 

Hercules (Sir), 68. 

Simon (Sir), 68. 
Malherbe, Joan, 26. 

Thomas, 26. 
Manny, William (Sir), 95. 
Maoulculum (Malcolm), 15. 
Margaret, of France, 95. 
Margaret, of Scotland, 92. 
Mariah, 159. 
Mason, Joseph Hodges, 126. 

Kate Juliette, 126. 
Mast, Wm. A. (Rev.), 166. 
Mathews, David (Lord), 121. 

Family, 121, 123. 

Frances Crowe, 123, 130. 



Mathews, John, 121, 123. 

John (Captain), 121, 130. 

Ophelia, 121, 123, 127, 128. 
129, 167. 

William, 121. 
Matilda, of Flanders, 92. 
Matilda, of Scotland, 92. 
Maud, of England, 92. 
Maud, of Germany, 92. 
Maynard, Nethan, 105. 
McCauley, Judge, 135, 165. 
McCleery, Henry, 111, 156. 
McKinnie, Nannie M., 127. 
McLean, T. L., 171. 
McPherson, Joel, 167, 168, 170. 
Meekinson, Mr., 135. 
Meriwether, Thomas, 154. 
Methby, John, lord of, 68. 
Mewer, John, 37. 

Katherine, 37. 
Middag, Johannes, 146. 

Jorris, 146. 
Middagh, 111. 

Aert Teunissen (Captain), 
108, 110, 111. 

Bata, 104, 111. 

Family, 108. 

George, 110. 

Johannes, 108, 110, 146. 

John, 108, 111, 146, 155. 

Joris, 104, 108, 110. 

Joris (Captain), 111. 

Mary, 108, 110, 111, 117, 
155. 
Midday, Martha, 145. 
Miner, Helen, 127. 

Lewis, 127. 

Maria V. (Mrs.), 164. 

Mr., 127. 
Mitchell, David, 153. 
Mowbray, 74. 

Christiana, 77. 

Constance. 80. 

William (Sir), 80. 
Mumby, 34. 
Mussenden, Maude, 55. 

Thomas (Sir), 55. 
Myer, George P., 136. 

Theodore R., 136. 



N 



Neville, Hawisia, 72. 
Matilda. 71. 
Ralph, 71, 73. 
Newcomen, 130. 
Arms, 42, 43. 
Bryan, 45, 60. 

Eleanor, 22, 29, 33, 37, 38, 
45, 51, 56, 60, 64, 73, 78, 
84, 90, 97. 



182 



BEATTY-ASFOEDBY 



Newcomen, John, 22, 29, 33, 37, 
38, 45, 51, 56, 60, 64, 73, 
78. 83, 89. 90, 97. 
Martin, 45, 60. 
Mary. 89. 

Mary Skipwith. 90. 
Robert, 42, 45, 60. 
William, 45, 60. 
Northumberland, Henry, Earl of, 

77. 
Nottingham, Willem, 146. 



o 



Ogilvie, Norman C. 125. 
Oldhall, William (Sir), 89. 
Otey, James Hervey (Bishop), 
122. 



Patton, Judge, 122. 
Pepin, le Bref, 91. 
Pepin, of Heristal, 91. 
Percy, 74. 

William, 74. 
Persons, The, 125. 
Peter. Lord of Courtnay, 95. 
Philip, the Hardy, King of 

France, 95. 
Pillar, Judge, 135, 165. 
Pitt, Annie Laurie, 131. 

R. H. (Rev.), 131. 
Plantagenet, 90, 96, 102, 130. 

Arms, 91, 93. 

Edmund, Earl of Lancaster, 
96. 

Geoffrey, 92, 95. 

Margaret (Lady), 95. 

Thomas, 95. 
Plumpton Arms, 74, 75. 

Elizabeth, 73, 78. 

Robert (Sir), 77. 

William (Sir), 73, 77. 
Pope, Catherine, 121. 
Portington, Elizabeth, 37. 
Potts, Mr., 157. 
Preston, Eleanor, 30. 

John, 30. 
Pugh, Day, 135. 

Elizabeth (Davis), 135. 

Mary Minerva, 135, 165. 
Purley, Anne, 45. 

Nicholas, 45. 

Q 

Quadring Arms, 51. 53. 
Elizabeth, 37, 51. 
Richard. 51. 
William, 37, 51. 



R 



Rathby, Alice, 59, 

William, 59. 
Raymond Berenger, Count of 

Provence, 95. 
Richard, 15. 

Richard II., of Normandy, 92. 
Richards. Catherine, 150, 151. 

Mary, 150. 

Stephen, 151. 
Richardson, John W., 155. 
Rigmaden, Margaret, 38. 
Ritchie, A-, 158. 

Abner, 112, 118, 156, 157. 

Catherine, 155. 

Family, 132, 155. 

Frances Maria, 117, 124, 131, 
132, 134, 135, 136, 162, 
163, 165. 

George, 163. 

George Gilman, 117, 124, 162. 

Jane, 155. 

John, 111, 155, 156. 

Maria B., 162, 164. 

Martha, 111, 156. 

Mary, 112, 156. 

Robert, 111, 112, 114, 117, 
124, 131, 132, 155, 156, 
158, 159, 160, 161, 162. 

Susan, 111, 156. 

Thomas, 155. 

William, 111, 112, 114, 117, 
118, 124, 155, 156, 157, 
158, 159. 

Zarniah, 112, 156. 
Robert, Earl of Artois, 96. 
Robert II., King of France, 92. 
Robrude, 91. 
Rochford, Anne, 34. 

Thomas (Sir), 34. 
Roos, Mary, 95. 

William (Lord), 95. 
Rosalie, of Italy, 92. 
Rosenberger, Angus E., 136. 

Frances F., 137. 
Ross, Henry, 149. 
Routzahn, Joseph, 169. 
Rutse, Grietie, 146. 



Sampson, John (Sir), 72. 
Sandford, Bryan, 45, 60. 

Mary, 45, 60. 
Sandon Arms, 38, 39. 

Arthur, 38, 56. 

Frances, 38, 56. 

Ivo, 38. 

Joan, 38. 

Katherine, 22, 29, 30, 37, 38, 
51, 56. 



INDEX 



183 



Sandon, William, 22, 29, 30, 
37, 38, 51. 56. 

William (Sir), 38. 56. 
Sawley, John, 72. 
Scalbhaidh, 15. 
Scanlan, 15. 
Scliaaf. Casper, 108. 
Schoeffer, David P., 163. 
Scroope, Isabella, 77. 

Richard (Archbishop of York), 
77. 

Richard (Lord), 77. 
Schaeff, A.. 159. 
Schauff, Mr., 159. 
Scheaff, Annie, 147. 
Sheffield, Elizabeth, 26. 

John, 26. 
Shelton, Fannie, 126. 

James W., 125. 

Mary Flewellen, 126. 
Shipwith, John, 38. 

Margaret, 38. 
Shoaf, Casper, 108. 
Shoaff, Annie, 147. 
Skipwlth, 130. 

Arms, 85, 87. 

Eleanor Kingston, 90. 

Elinor, 55. 

John, 45, 60, 64, 73, 78, 83, 
86, 89, 90, 97. 

John (Sir). 89. 

Margaret, 83. 

Mary, 45, 60, 64, 73, 78, 83, 
90. 97. 

Patrick, 55. 

Thomas (Sir), 89. 

William (Sir), 83, 86, 89, 97. 
Smith, Elizabeth, 149. 
Snyder, Adam Cary. 129. 

Adam Clark (Judge), 122, 
123, 128. 

Elizabeth, 122. 

Flavins Josephus, 128. 

Frederick William, 123. 

Harry Otey (Dr.). 123. 

Henrietta Elizabeth, 129. 

John, 122. 

Henton Mathews, 123. 

Kirke, 129. 

Otey Louise, 129. 

Robert Lee, 129. 

Verne, 123. 

William Holt, 129. 

Zulieme Austin, 123. 
Southill, Gerard, 55. 
Stapleton, Brian (Sir), 78. 

Elizabeth, 78, 83. 

William, 83. 
Stark, Dr.. 127. 

Eliza, 127. 

Harriet, 127. 

Lewis, 127. 



Stark, Maria V., 127. 

Mary, 127. 

Matilda Green, 164. 
Stephenson, Walter, 165. 
Stevens, Mr., 156. 
Stickney, 59. 
/ Stoddart. John (Captain), 103. 
Stone, Mr., 158, 159. 
St. Quintin, Thomas (Sir), 89. 
Swett, Lieut. 160. 
Syme, Wm. H., 167, 168. 



Talbot, Elspith, 155. 
Tamworth, Joan, 34. 

Nicholas (Sir), 34. 
Taney, Chief Justice, 119. 
Thomas, Catherine, Mrs., 114. 
Tilney. Alice, 86. 

Frederick (Sir), 86. 
Toadvin, E. Stanley, 149, 154. 
Totoft, Joan, 51. 
Towers, Jane, 55. 

Thomas, 55. 
Trickey. Joseph, 160. 
Trico, Catherine, 110. 

Joris, 110. 
Turk, J. Alexander, 130. 

Mrs., 130. 

Rudolph (Colonel), 129. 

Rudolph Samuel, 129. 

William A., 130. 
Tylney, Philip (Sir), 71. 

u 

Usfleet, Gerard (Sir), 72. 



V 



Van Camp. Nellie, 127. 
Van Ysselsteyn. Marritje Mar- 
tens, 104, 111. 

Marten Cornelise, 111. 
Vavasour, Ann, 64, 73, 78, 83. 

Annabell, 83. 

Arms, 79, 81. 

Henry (Sir), 64, 73, 78, 80, 
83 

.John! 64, 73, 78, 83. 

WilliaiB, 83. 

William (Sir). 83. 
Vodon, Earl of Orleans, 91. 

w 

^ Wallis. Nichola, 80. 
Stephen (Sir), 80. 



184 



BEATTY-ASFORDBY 



Waterton, Joan, 96. 

Robert (Sir). 96. 
Waugh, Dorothy Effie, 136. 
Westmeales, Katherine, 59. 

Robert. 59. 
Whitehare, Susan, 114. 
William, 15. 
William au Thiona, 16. 
William V., Duke of Aquitaine 

and Count of Poictou, 95. 
William, Earl of Gloucester, 95. 
William, the Conquerer, 92. 
Willoughby de Eresby, Mar- 
garet, 89. 

William (Lord), 89. 
Willoughby, house of. 86. 
Willstrope, Agnes, 72. 

Edward (Sir), 72. 
Wilson, Louise Helen, 134. 



Withrow, James, 167, 168, 169, 

170, 171. 
W^olley, Alice, 25, 29, 33, 37, 
41, 45, 47, 52, 56 60, 67, 
73, 78. 84, 90, 97. 
Arms, 47, 49. 
John, 47. 
Robert, 47. 

William, 25, 29, 33, 37, 41, 
45, 47, 52, 56, 60, 67, 73. 
78, 84, 90, 97. 
Wood, Jos. M., 145, 146. 
Wymbish, Katherine, 30. 
Thomas, 30. 



Young, Eleanor. 147. 
Jacob, 108, 153. 



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